SUKGER Y AND ANA TO MY 



Kelly and Noble's Gynecology 

 and Abdominal Surgery 



Qynecology and Abdominal Surgery. Edited by HOWARD 

 A. KELLY, M. D., Professor of Gynecology in Johns Hopkins 

 University; and CHARLES P. NOBLE, M.D., Clinical Professor of 

 Gynecology in the Woman's Medical College, Philadelphia. Two 

 imperial octavo volumes of 900 pages each, containing 650 illus- 

 trations, mostly original. Per volume : Cloth, $8.00 net ; Half 

 Morocco, $9.50 net. 



VOLUME I JUST READY VOLUME II READY IN JULY 

 650 ILLUSTRATIONS BY BECKER AND BRODEL 



In view of the intimate association of gynecology with abdominal surgery 

 the editors have combined these two important subjects in one work. For this 

 reason the work will be doubly valuable, for nor only the gynecologist and 

 general practitioner will find it an exhaustive treatise, but the surgeon also 

 will find here the latest technic of the various abdominal operations. It pos- 

 sesses a number of valuable features not to be found in any other publication 

 covering the same fields. It contains a chapter upon the bacteriology and one 

 upon the pathology of gynecology, dealing fully with the scientific basis of 

 gynecology. In no other work can this information, prepared by specialists, 

 be found as separate chapters. There is a large chapter devoted entirely to 

 medical gynecology , written especially for the physician engaged in general 

 practice. Heretofore the general practitioner was compelled to search through 

 an entire work in order to obtain the information desired. Abdominal sur- 

 gery proper, as distinct from gynecology, is fully treated, embracing operations 

 upon the stomach, upon the intestines, upon the liver and bile-ducts, upon 

 the pancreas and spleen, upon the kidney, ureter, bladder, and the perito- 

 neum. Special attention has been given to modern technic, and illustrations 

 of the very highest order have been used to make clear the various steps of the 

 operations. Indeed the illustrations are truly magnificent, being the work 

 of Mr. Hermann Becker and Mr. Max Brodel, of the Johns Hopkins 

 Hospital. 



