Saunders* College Text-Books 



Half § Moirinniiil Histotegj 



Normal Histology and Organography. By Charles Hill, M. D. 

 i2mo of 468 pages, 337 illustrations. Flexible leather, $2.00 net. 



Second Edition. 



Dr. Hill's work is characterized by a brevity of style, yet a complete- 

 ness of discussion, rarely met in a book of this size. The entire field 

 is covered, beginning with the preparation of material, the cell, the 

 various tissues, on through the different organs and regions, and end- 

 ing with fixing and staining solutions. 



Dr. E. P. Porterfield, St. Louis University: " I am very much gratified 

 to find so handy a work. It is so full and complete that it meets all 

 requirements." 



Histology. By A. A. Bohm, M. D., and RI. von Davidoff, 

 M. D., of Munich. Edited by G. Carl Huber, M. D., Professor 

 of Embryology at the Wistar Institute, University of Pennsyl- 

 vania. Octavoof 528 pages, 377 illustrations. Flexible cloth, $3.50 

 net. Second Edition. 



This work is conceded to be the most complete text-book on human 

 histology published. Particularly full on microscopic technic and 

 staining, it is especially serviceable in the laboratory. Every step in 

 technic is clearly and precisely detailed. It is a work you can depend 

 upon always. 



New York Medical Journal: "There can be nothing but praise for 

 this model text-book and laboratory guide." 



Hdiildir^s Einnifeiry©l©gy 



Embryology. By J. C. Heisler, M. D, Professor of Anatomy, 

 Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. Octavo of 432 pages, 

 205 illustrations. Cloth, H3.00 net. Third Edition. 



A book of the greatest teaching value. The subject is taken up sys- 

 tematically, treating the development of each tissue, each organ, each 

 region and system in a most thorough way. There are frequent allu- 

 sions to certain facts of comparative embryology. 



Journal American Medical Association : " The text is concise, and 

 yet sufficiently full for a text-book." 



