WORKS ON THE MEDICAL SCIENCES 



his thorough familiarity with the progress of physiological knowledge, and in the rare judgment with 

 which purely hypothetical ideas and those founded on sufficient evidence are discriminated. The 

 work is therefore a most admirable guide to physiological progress as well as general physiological 

 knowledge." — The Nation. 



FOSTER. — Text-Book of Physiology. In one volume. By Michael 



Foster, M.A., M.D., etc , etc. Abridged and revised from the Sixth Edition 



of the Author's larger Work published in five octavo volumes. 8vo. Cloth, 



$5.00; Sheep, 35.50. 



This new Edition will contain all the Illustrations included in the larger work, and will be pub- 

 lished in one octavo volume of about rooo pages. It will contain all of the author's more important 

 additions to the complete work, and be like the sixth edition of that copyrighted in this country. 



FOSTER (M.) and BALFOUR (F. M.). — Practical Embryology. With 

 Illustrations. $2.60. 



" A book especially adapted to the needs of medical students, who will find in it all that is most 

 essential for them to know in the elements of vertebrate embryology." — Academy. 



FOSTER (M.) and LANGLEY (J.N.). — A Course of Elementary Prac- 

 tical Physiology. Fifth Edition, enlarged. $2.00. 



" This work will prove of great value to the teacher of physiology, as an aid to the preparation 

 of an eminently practical course of lectures and demonstrations of elementary experimental physi- 

 ology. Its chief utility, however, will be to the intelligent student, who, armed with a dissecting case, 

 a microscope, and the book, will be enabled to pass his summer vacation in a manner at once interest- 

 ing and profitable." — Medical Record. 



FOSTER (M.) and SHORE (L. E.). — Elementary Physiology. i6mo. 



Illustrated. 75 cents. 



" It is a veritable multum in parvo, and will be fully appreciated by those for whom it is 

 intended." — American Medico-Surgical Bulletin. 



" Nothing at once so scientific and so simple has appeared on the subject. It is unreservedly 

 commended as a text-book for secondary schools." — The Educational Review. 



GALTON. — Healthy Hospitals. Observations on some points connected with 



Hospital Construction. With Illustrations. By Sir Douglas Galton, K.C.B., 



F.R.S. 32.75. 



" This is a valuable contribution to the literature of a most important subject. The eminence in 

 engineering circles of Sir Douglas Galton would alone determine its merit. After a brief introduction 

 into the origin of hospitals, he defines them as places ' not only for the reception and cure of the sick 

 poor . . . but also as technical schools in which the medical student must learn his profession, and as 

 experimental workshops in which the matured physician or surgeon carries on scientific research.' . . . 

 While the subject-matter is largely technical, it is presented in a clear style, and its meaning is clear 

 to any intelligent person. We commend Sir Douglas Gallon's book to all builders of hospitals." — 

 Medical Record. 



GAMGEE. — A Text-book of the Physiological Chemistry of the Ani- 

 mal Body. Including an Account of the Chemical Changes occurring in 

 Disease. By Arthur Gamgee, M.D., F.R.S. 8vo. 

 Vol. I. The Proteids. 34-50. 



Vol. II. The Physiological Chemistry of Digestion. With two chromo- 

 lithographic Charts by Spillon and Wilkinson. $4.50. 

 GILLIES. — The Theory and Practice of Counter-irritation. By H. 

 Cameron Gillies, M.D. 8vo. $2.50. 



GOODFELLOW(J.).— The Dietetic Value of Bread. $1.50. 



GRESWELL (D. A.). — A Contribution to the Natural History of Scar- 

 latina. 8vo. 32.50. 



