Medical Publications of F. A. Davis ^ Philadelphia. 



JPBICJE and IIAGLBTON 



Three Charts of the Nervo-Uascular System. 



Part I. — The Nerves. Part II. — The Arteries. 

 Part III. — The Veins. 



A New Edition, Revised and Perfected. Arranged l)y W. Henry Price, 

 M.D., and S. Potts Eagleton, M.D. Endorsed by leading anatomists. Clearly 

 and beautifully printed upon extra durable paper. 



PART I. Tlie Nerves. — Gives in a clear form not only the Cranial and Spinal Nerves, show- 

 ing the formation of the differeuc Plexuses and their branches, but also the complete 

 distribution of the Sympathetic Kekves. 



PART II. The Arteries.— Gives a unique grouping of the Arterial system, showing the 

 divisions and subdivisions of all the vessels, beginning from the heart and tracing their 

 CONTINUOUS distribution to the periphery, and showing at a glance the terminal 

 branches of eacli artery. 



PART III. The Veins.— Shows how the blood from the periphery of the body is gradually 

 collected by the larger veins, and these coalescing f oi'ining still larger vessels, until they 

 finally trace themselves into the Right Auricle of the heart. 



It is therefore readily seen tliat "The Nervo-Vascular System of Charts" 

 offers the following superior advantages : — 



■ 1. It is the only arrangement which combines the Three Sj'stems, and yd 

 each is perfect and distinct in itself 



3. It is the only instance of the Cranial, Spinal, and Sympathetic Nervous 

 Systems being represented on one chart. 



3. From its neat size and clear type, and being printed only upon one side, 

 it may be tacked up in any convenient place, and is always ready for freshening 

 up the memory and reviewing for examination. 



Price, post-paid, in United States and Canada, 50 cents, net, complete ; in 

 Great Britain, 3s. 6d. ; in France, 3 fr. 60. 



For the student of anatomy there can pos- 

 sibly be no more concise way of acquiring a 

 knowledge of the nerves, veins, and arteries 

 of the human system. It presents at a glance 

 their trunks and l>ranclies in the great divis- 

 ions of the body. It will save a world of tedi- 

 ous reading, and will impress itself on the 

 mind as no ordinary vade inecum, even, could. 



Its price is nominal and its value inestimable. 

 No student should be without it.— Pacific 

 Mecord of Medicine and i^urgery. 



These are three admirably arranged charts 

 for the use of students, to* assist iji memor- 

 izing their anatomical sudies. — BufTulo Med. 

 and Surg. Jour. 



JPURDY 



Diabetes: Its Cause, Symptoms asl^ Treatment 



By Chas. W. Purdy, M.D. (Queen's University), Honorary Fellow of the 

 Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Kingston ; Member of the College 

 of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario ; Author of "Blight's Disease and Allied 

 Affections of the Kidneys ;" Member of the Association of American Physicians ; 

 Member of the American Medical Association ; Member of the Chicago Academy 

 of Sciences, etc. 



Contents. — Section I. Historical, Geographical, and Climatological Con- 

 siderations of Diabetes Mellitus. II. Physiological and Pathological Considera- 

 tions of Diabetes Mellitus III. Etiology of Diabetes Mellitus. IV. Morbid 

 Anatomy of Diabetes ^lellitus. V. Symptomatology of Diabetes Mellitus. VI. 

 Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus. VII. Clinical Illustrations of Diabetes Mellitus. 

 VIII. Diabetes Insipidus ; Bibliography. 



13mo. Dark Blue Extra Cloth. Nearly 200 pages. With Clinical Illus- 

 trations. iV<9. 8 in the PJiysicians' and Students' Ready -Reference Series. 



Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.25, net; in Great 

 Britain, 6s. 6d. ; in France, 7 fr. 75. 



This will prove a most entertaining as well 

 as most interesting treatise upon a disease 

 which frequently falls to the lot of every 

 practitioner. The work has been written with 

 a special view of bringhig out the features of 

 the disease ns it occurs in the United States. 

 The author has very judiciously arranged the 

 little volume, and it will offer many pleasant 

 attractions to the practitioner.— ivas/iri7Ze 

 Joiirnnl of Medicine and Surgery. 



While many monographs iiave been pub- 



lished which have dealt with the subject of 

 diabetes, we know of none which so thoronghly 

 considers its relations to the geographical 

 conditions which exist in the United States, 

 nor which is more complete in its summary of 

 the symptomatology and treatment of this 

 affection. A number of tables, showing the 

 percentage of sugar in a very large number of 

 alcoholic beverages, adds very con.siderably to 

 the value of the w/ov^.— Medical News. 



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