Saunders' College Text-Books 



Tineaitmeinift oiF 



The Treatment of Emergencies. By HUBLEY R. OWEN, M. D., Sur- 

 geon to the Philadelphia General Hospital. 12 mo of 500 pages, 

 with 249 illustrations. 



Dr. Owen's book gives you not only the actual technic of the procedures, 

 but also the reason why a particular method is advised. This makes 

 for correctness. You get chapters on fractures of all kinds, on contu- 

 sions and wounds, going fully into symptoms, treatments, and complica- 

 tions. Particularly strong is the chapter on gunshot wounds, which 

 gives the new treatments that the great European War has developed. 

 You get the principles of hemorrhage, together with its constitutional 

 and local treatments. You get chapters on sprains, strains, disloca- 

 tions, burns and scalds, etc. The book is complete; it is thorough; 

 it is practical. 



Personal Health. By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., Elmira, New York. 

 i2moof 407 pages. Cloth, $1.50 net. Just Issued. 



Dr. Brady teaches you how to take care of yourself, how to forestall ill- 

 ness, how to apply sound, practical judgment to the routine of your 

 daily life. He gives you a clear idea of the causes of ill-health of any 

 kind. He prescribes simple treatments when these are sufficient. He 

 carefully indicates the stage at which professional advice should be 

 sought. He knows what you want, for fifteen years' experience has 

 taught him. 



The Prevention of Disease. By KINELM WINSLOW, M. D., formerly 

 Assistant Professor of Comparative Therapeutics, Harvard Uni- 

 versity, i amo of 348 pages, illustrated. Cloth, $1.75 net. 



This book is a practical guide for the layman, giving him briefly the 

 means to avoid the various diseases described. . The chapters on diet, 

 exercise, tea, coffee, and alcohol are of special interest, as are those on 

 the prevention of cancer, colds, constipation, obesity, nervous disorders, 

 tuberculosis, infantile paralysis, sex hygiene, decayed teeth, colds, 

 enlarged tonsils and adenoids, and the diseases of middle age. The 

 work is a record of twenty-five years' active practice. 



