28 BLANCHARD & LEA'S MEDICAL 



TOMES (JOHN), F. R. S. 

 A MANUAL OF DENTAL PRACTICE. Illustrated by numerous engravings 



on wood. In one handsome volume. (Preparing.) 



TODD (R. B.), M. D., AND BOWMAN (WILLIAM), F. R. S. 



PHYSIOLOGICAL ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF MAN. With 



numerous handsome wood-cuts. Parts I, II, and III, in one octavo volume, 552 pages. Part IV 



will complete the work. 



The distinguishing peculiarity of this work is, that the authors investigate for themselves every 

 fact asserted ; and it is the immense labor consequent upon the vast number of observations re- 

 quisite to carry out this plan, which has so long delayed the appearance of its completion. The 

 first portion ot Part IV, with numerous original illustrations, was published in the Medical News 

 and Library for 1853, and the completion will be issued immediately on its appearance in London. 

 Those who have subscribed since the appearance of the preceding portion of the work can have 

 the three parts by mail, on remittance of $2 50 to the publishers. 



TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 

 VOLUME VI, for 1853, large 8vo. ; of 870 pages, with numerous colored plates 



and wood-cuts. 

 Also to be had, a few sets of the Transactions from 1848 to 1853, in six large octavo volumes. 



price $25. These volumes are all published by and sold on account of the Association. 



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

 LECTURES ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF PHYSIC. 



Third American, from the last London edition. Revised, with Additions, by D. FRANCIS CONDIE, 



M. D., author of a " Treatise on the Diseases of Children," &c. In one octavo volume, of nearly 



eleven hundred large pages, strongly bound with raised bands. 



To say that it is the very best work on the sub- 

 ject now extant, is but to echo the sentiment of the 

 medical press throughout the country. N. O. 

 Medical Journal . 



Of the text-books recently republished Watson is 

 rery justly the principal favorite. Holmes's Rep. 

 to Nat. Med. Assoc. 



By universal consent the work ranks among the 

 very best text-books in our language. Illinois and 

 Indiana Med. Journal. 



Regarded on all hands as one of the very best, if 

 not the very best, systematic treatise on practical 

 medicine extant. St. Louis Med. Journal. 



Confessedly one of the very best works on the 

 principles and practice of physic in the English or 

 any other language. Med. Examiner. 



Asa text- book it has no equal ; as a compendium 

 of pathology and practice no superior. New York 

 Annalist. 



We know of no work better calculated for being 

 placed in the hands of the student, and for a text- 

 book; on every important point the author seems 

 to have posted up hia knowledge to the day.-- 

 Amer. Med. Journal. 



One of the most practically useful books that 

 ever was presented to the student. N. Y. Med. 

 Journal. 



WALSHE (W. H.), M. D., 



Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine in University College, London. 



DISEASES OF THE HEART, LUNGS, AND APPENDAGES; their 



Symptoms and Treatment. In one handsome volume, large royal 12mo., 512 pages. 

 We consider this as the ablest work in the En- 1 the author being the first stethoscopist of the day. 

 rlish language, on the subject of which it treats; | Charleston Medical Journal. 



WHAT TO OBSERVE 

 AT THE BEDSIDE AND AFTER DEATH, IN MEDICAL CASES. 



Published under the authority of the London Society for Medical Observation. In one very- 

 handsome volume, royal 12mo , extra cloth. (Just Issued.) 

 We hail the appearance of this book as the grand j given to the world, through a small but useful 



desideratum. Charleston Medical Journal. 



This is truly a very capital book. The whole 

 medical world will reap advantages from its publi- 

 cation. The medical journals will soon show its 

 influence on the character of the ' < Reports of Cases" 

 which they publish. Drs. Ballard and Walshe have 



medical organization, a cheap but invaluable book. 

 We do advise every reader of this notice to buy it 

 and use it. Unless he is so vain as to imagine him- 

 self superior to the ordinary human capacity, lie will 

 in six months see its inestimable advantages. 

 Stethoscope. 



WILDE (W. R.), 



Surgeon to St. Mark's Ophthalmic and Aural Hospital, Dublin. 



AURAL SURGERY, AND THE NATURE AND TREATMENT OF DIS- 

 EASES OF THE EAR. In one handsome octavo volume, with illustrations. (Now Ready.) 

 So little is generally known in this country concerning tne causes, symptoms, and treatment ol 

 aural affections, that a practical and scientific work on that subject, from a practitioner of Mr. 

 Wilde's great experience, cannot fail to be productive of much benefit, by attracting attention 

 to this obscure class of diseases, which too frequently escape attention until past relief. The im- 

 mense number of cases which have come under Mr. Wilde's observation for many years, have 

 afforded him opportunities rarely enjoyed for investigating this branch of medical science, and inn 

 work may therefore be regarded as of the highest authority. 



This work certainly contains more information on 

 the subject to which it is devoted than any other 

 with which we are acquainted. We feel grateful to 

 the author for his manful effort to rescue this depart- 

 ment of surgery from the hands of the empirics who 

 nearly monopolize it. We think he has successfully 

 shown that aural diseases are not beyond the re- 

 sources of art ; that they are governed by the same 



laws, and amenable to the same general method? of 

 treatment as other morbid processes. The work i* 

 not written to supply the cravings of popular patro- 

 nage, but it is wholly addressed to the profession, 

 and bears on every page the impress of the reflection* 

 of a sagacious and practical surgeon. Va. Surg. and 

 Med. Journal. 



