CHEMISTRY AXD EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT. 5 



Wells' Chemical Pathology 



Chemical Pathology. Being a Discussion of General Pathology 

 from the Standpoint of the Chemical Processes Involved. By H. 

 GIDEON WELLS, PH.D., M.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology in the 

 University of Chicago. Octavo of 549 pages. Cloth, $3.25 net; Half 

 Morocco, $4.75 net. 



JUST ISSUED 



Dr. Wells here concisely presents the latest work systematically considering the 

 subject of general pathology from the standpoint of the chemical processes 

 involved. It is written for the physician, for those engaged in research in pathol- 

 ogy and physiologic chemistry, and for the medical student. In the introductory 

 chapter are discussed the chemistry and physics of the animal cell, giving the 

 essential facts of ionization, diffusion, osmotic pressure, etc., and the relation of 

 these facts to cellular activities. Special chapters are devoted to Diabetes and to 

 Uric-acid Metabolism and Gout. 



Wm. H. Welch, M. D., Professor of Pathology r , Johns Hopkins University. 



" The work fills a real need in the English literature of a very important subject, and I shall 

 be glad to recommend it to my students." 



American Text-Book qf 

 Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat 



American Text-Book of Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose, and 

 Throat. Edited by G. E. DE SCHWEINITZ, M.D., Professor of Ophthal- 

 mology in the University of Pennsylvania ; and B. ALEXANDER RANDALL, 

 M. D., Clinical Professor of Diseases of the Ear in the University of 

 Pennsylvania. Imperial octavo, 1251 pages, with 766 illustrations, 5,3 

 of them in colors. Cloth, $7.00 net; Sheep or Half Morocco, $8.50 n*.t. 



This work is essentially a text-book on the one hand, and, on the other, a 

 volume of reference to which the practitioner may turn and find a series of articles 

 written by representative authorities on the subjects portrayed by them. There- 

 fore, the practical side of the question has been brought into prominence. Par- 

 ticular emphasis has been laid on the most approved methods of treatment. 



American Journal of the Medical Sciences 



" The different articles are complete, forceful, and, if one may be permitted to use the term, 

 'snappy.' in decided contrast to some of the labored but not more learned descriptions which 

 have appeared in the larger systems of ophthalmology." 



