24 BLANCHARD & LEA'S MEDICAL 



NEILL (JOHN), M. D., 



Surgeon to the Pennsylvania Hospital, &c.; and 

 FRANCIS GURNEY SMITH, M.D., 



Professor of Institutes of Medicine in the Pennsylvania Medical College. 



AN ANALYTICAL COMPENDIUM OF THE VARIOUS BRANCHES 



OF MEDICAL SCIENCE ; for the Use and Examination of Students. Second edition, revised 

 and improved. In one very large and handsomely printed royal 12mo. volume, of over 'one 

 thousand pages, with three hundred and fifty illustrations on wood. Strongly bound in leather, 

 with raised bands. 



The speedy sale of a large impression of this worlc has afforded to the authors gratifying evidence 

 of the correctness of the views which actuated them in its preparation. In meeting the demand 

 for a second edition, they have therefore been desirous to render it more worthy of the favor with 

 which it has been received. To accomplish this, they have spared neither time nor labor in embo- 

 dying in it such discoveries and improvements as have been made since its first appearance, and 

 such alterations as have been suggested by its practical use in the class and examination-room. 

 Considerable modifications have thus been 'introduced throughout all the departments treated of in 

 the volume, but more especially in the portion devoted to the "Practice of Medicine," which has 

 been entirely rearranged and rewritten. 



Notwithstanding the enlarged size and improved execution of this work, the price has not been 

 increased, and it is confidently presented as one of the cheapest volumes now before the profession. 



In the rapid course of lectures, where work for 

 the students is heavy, and review necessary for an 

 examination, a compend is not only valuable, but 

 it is almost a sine qua non. The one before us is, 

 in most of the divisions, the most unexceptionable 

 of all books of the kind that we know of. The 

 newest and soundest doctrines and the latest im- 

 provements and discoveries are explicitly, though 

 concisely, laid before the student. Of course it is 

 useless for us to recommend it to all last course 

 students, but there is a class to whom we very 

 sincerely commend this cheap book as worth its 

 weight in silver that class is the graduates in 

 medicine of more than ten years' standing, who 

 have not studied medicine since. They will perhaps 

 find out from it that the science is not exactly now 

 what it was when they left it off. The Stethoscope 



Having made free use of this volume in our ex- 

 aminations of pupils, we can speak from experi- 

 ence in recommending it as an admirable compend 

 for students, and as especially useful to preceptors 

 who examine their pupils. It will save the teacher 

 much labor by enabling him readily to recall all of 

 the points upon which his pupils should be ex- 

 amined. A work of this sort should be in the hands 

 of every one who takes pupils into his office with a 

 view of examining them; and this is unquestionably 

 the best of its class. Let every practitioner who has 



Kupils provide himself with it, and he will find the 

 ibor of refreshing his knowledge so much facilitated 

 that he will be able to do justice to his pupils ut very 

 little cost of time or trouble to himself. Transyl- 

 vania Med. Journal. 



NELIGAN (J. MOORE), M. D., M. R. I. A., &c. 

 A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE SKIN. In one 



neat royal 12mo. volume, of 334 pages. 



OWEN (PROF. R.), 



Author of" Lectures on Comparative Anatomy," " Archetype of the Skeleton," &c. 



ON THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF THE SKELETON, AND OF THE 



TEETH. One vol. royal 12mo., with numerous illustrations. (Just Issued.) 

 The name of the distinguished author is a sufficient guarantee that this little volume will prove 

 a satisfactory manual and guide to all students of Comparative Anatomy and Osteology. The im- 

 portance of this subject in geological investigations will also render this work a most valuable 

 assistant to those interested in that science. 



PHILLIPS (BENJAMIN), F. R. S., &c. 



SCROFULA; its Nature, its Prevalence, its Causes, and the Principles of its 

 Treatment. In one volume, octavo, with a plate, pp. 350. 



PANCOAST (J.), M. D., 



Professor of Anatomy in the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, &c. 



OPERATIVE SURGERY; or, A Description and Demonstration of the various 

 Processes of the Art ; including all the New Operations, and exhibiting the State of Surgical 

 Science in its present advanced condition. Complete in one roval 4to. volume, of 380 pages of 

 letter-press description and eighty large 4to. plates, comprising 486 illustrations. Second edition, 

 improved. 



cerned, we are proud as an American to say that, 



This excellent work is constructed on the model 

 of the French Surgical Works by Velpeau and Mal- 

 gaigne; and, ao far as the English language is con- 



OF ITS KIND IT HAS NO SUPERIOR. N. Y. Journal of 

 Medicine. 



PARKER (LANGSTON), 



Surgeon to the Queen's Hospital, Birmingham. 



THE MODERN TREATMENT OF SYPHILITIC DISEASES, BOTH PRI 



MARY AND SECONDARY; comprising the Treatment of Constitutional and Confirmed Syphi- 

 lis, by a safe and successful method. With numerous Cases, Formulae, and Clinical Observa- 

 tions. From the Third and entirely rewritten London edition. In one neat octavo volume, 

 of 316 pages. (Just Issued.) 



Few of our readers can require to be informed j nnd in some parts has been rewritten, it is incum- 

 that Mr. Langston Parker has for some years held bent on us to describe a few of its more salient fea- 

 one of the highest positions as an authority on the tures. * * # We can heartily recommend Mr. Par- 

 treatment of syphilis, lie cannot, therefore, be in ker's Modern Treatment of Syphilitic Diseases as 

 the position of one who requires the aid of the re- an admirable exposition of the subject of which it 

 viewer to enable him to bring to light a first work ; | treats. Association Medical Journal. 

 but as liii book has undergone an entire revision, I 



