BL AN CHARD & LEA'S MEDICAL 



SMITH (HENRY H.), M.D., 



Professor of Surgery in the University of Pennsylvania, &c. 



MINOR SURGERY; or, Hints on the E very-day Duties of the Surgeon. Illus- 

 trated by two hundred and forty-seven illustrations. Third and enlarged edition. In one hand- 

 some royal 12mo. volume, pp. 456. 



A work such as the present is therefore highly 

 useful to tfce student, and we commend this one 

 to their attention. American Journal of Medical 

 Sciences. 



And a capital little book it is. . . Minor Surgery, 

 we repeat, is really Major Surgery, and anything 

 which teaches it is worth having. So we cordially 

 recommend this little book of Dr. Smith's. Med.- 

 Chir. Review. 



This beautiful little work has been compiled with 

 a view to the wants of the profession in the matter 

 of bandaging, &c., and well and ably has the author 

 performed his labors. Well adapted to give the 

 requisite information on the subjects of which it 

 treats. Medical Examiner. 



The directions are plain, and illustrated through- 

 out with clear engravings. London Lancet. 



One of the best works they can consult on the 

 subject of which it treats. Southern Journal of 

 Medicine and Pharmacy. 



No operator, however eminent, need hesitate to 

 consult this unpretending yet excellent book. Those 

 who are young in the business would find Dr. Smith's 

 treatise a necessary companion, after once under- 

 standing its true character. Boston Med. and ISurg. 

 Journal. 



No young practitioner should be without this little 

 volume; and we venture to assert, that it maybe 

 consulted by the senior members of the profession 

 with more real benefit, than the more volum nous 

 works. Western Lancet. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR, AND 



HORNER (WILLIAM E.), M.D., 

 Late Professor of Anatomy in the University of Pennsylvania. 



AN ANATOMICAL ATLAS, illustrative of the Structure of the Human Body. 

 In one volume, large imperial octavo, with about six hundred and fifty beautiful figures. 



These figures are well selected, and present a 

 complete and accurate representation of that won- 

 derful fabric, the human body. The plan of this 

 Atlas, which renders it so peculiarly convenient 

 for the student, and its superb artistical execution, 

 have been already pointed out. We must congratu- 



late the student upon the completion of this Atlas, 

 as it is the most convenient work of the kind that 

 has yet appeared ; and we must add, the very beau- 

 tiful manner in which it is " got up" is so creditable 

 to the country as to be flattering to our national 

 pride. American Medical Journal. 



SARGENT (F. W.), M. D. 



ON BANDAGING AND OTHER POINTS OF MINOR SURGERY. 



one handsome royal 12mo. volume of nearly 400 pages, with 128 wood-cuts. 



In 



The very best manual of Minor Surgery we have 

 Been ; an American volume, with nearly four hundred 

 pages of good practical lessons, illustrated by about 

 one hundred and thirty wood-cuts. In these days 

 of " trial," when a doctor's reputation hangs upon 

 a clove hitch, or the roll of a bandage, it would be 

 well, perhaps, to carry such a volume as Mr. Sar- 

 gent's always in our coat-pocket, or, at all events, 

 to listen attentively to his instructions at home. 

 Buffalo Med. Journal. 



We have carefully examined this work, and find it 

 well executed and admirably adapted to the use of 

 the student. Besides the subjects usually embraced 

 in works on Minor Surgery, there is a short chapter 

 on bathing, another on anaesthetic agents, and an 

 appendix of formulae. The author hasgiven an ex- 

 cellent work on this subject, and his publishers have 

 illustrated and printed it in most beautiful style. 

 The Charleston Medical Journal. 



SKEY (FREDERICK C.), F. R. S., &c. 

 OPERATIVE SURGERY. In one very handsome octavo volume of over 650 



pages, with about one hundred wood-cuts. 



SHARPEY (WILLIAM), M. D., JONES QUAIN, M. D., AND 

 RICHARD QUAIN, F. R. S., &c. 



HUMAN ANATOMY. Revised, with Notes and Additions, hy JOSEPH LEIDY, 



M. D. Complete in two large octavo volumes, of about thirteen hundred pages. Beautifully 

 illustrated with over five hundred engravings on wood. 



:omical study, by placing before the student 

 y department of his science, with a view to 



It is indeed a work calculated to make an era in 

 anatomical study, 

 every 



the relative importance of each ; and so skilfully 

 have the different parts been interwoven, that no 

 one who makes this work the basis of his studies, 

 will hereafter have any excuse for neglecting or 

 undervaluing any important particulars connected 

 with the structure of the human frame; and 

 whether the bias of his mind lead him in a more 

 especial manner to surgery, physic, or physiology, 

 he will find here a work at once so comprehensive 

 and practical as to defend him from exclusiveness 

 on the one hand, and pedantry on the other. 

 Monthly Journal and Retrospect of the Medical 

 Sciences. 



We have no hesitation in recommending this trea- 

 tise on anatomy as the most complete on that sub- 

 ject in the English language; and the only one. 

 perhaps, in any language, which brings the state 

 of knowledge forward to the most recent disco- 

 veries. The Edinburgh Med. and Surg. Journal. 



Admirably calculated to fulfil the object for which 

 it is intended. Provincial Medical Journal. 



The most complete Treatise on Anatomy in the 

 English language. Edinburgh Medical Journal. 



There is no work in the English language to, be 

 preferred to Dr. Quain's Elements of Anatomy. 

 London Journal of Medicine, 



STANLEY (EDWARD). 

 A TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE BONES. 



extra cloth, 286 pages. 



In one volume, octavo, 



SOLLY (SAMUEL), F. R. S. 



THE HUMAN BRAIN; its Structure, Physiology, and Diseases. With a 

 Description of the Typical Forms of the Brain in the Animal Kingdom. From the Second and 

 much enlarged London edition. In one octavo volume of 500 pages, with 120 wood-cuts. 



