DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT. 



Cabot's 

 Differential Diagnosis 



Differential Diagnosis. Presented through an Analysis of 385 

 Cases. By RICHARD C. CABOT, M. D., Assistant Professor of Clinical 

 Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston. Octavo of 764 pages, 

 illustrated Cloth, $5.50 net. 



THE NEW (2d) EDITION 

 EIGHT LARGE PRINTINGS 



Dr. Cabot' s work takes up diagnosis from the point of view of the presenting 

 symptom the symptom in any disease which holds the foreground in the clinical 

 picture : the principal complaint. It groups diseases under these symptoms, and 

 points the way to proper reasoning in coming to a correct diagnosis. It works 

 backward from each leading symptom to the actual organic cause of the symptom. 

 This the author does by means of case-teaching. 



Chas. Lyman Greene, M.D., University of Minnesota. 



" It is one of the most valuable books that has been published in recent years, or indeed at 

 any time." 



Morrow's Diagnostic and 

 Therapeutic Technic 



Diagnostic and Therapeutic Technic. By ALBERT S. MORROW, 

 M. D., Adjunct Professor of Surgery, New York Polyclinic. Octavo 

 of 775 pages, with 815 original line drawings. Cloth, $5.00 net. 



JUST THE WORK FOR PRACTITIONERS 



Dr. Morrow's new work is decidedly a work for you the physician engaged 

 in general practice. It is a work you need because it tells you just how to perform 

 those procedures required of you every day, and it tells you and shows you by 

 clear, new line-drawings, in a way never before approached. It is not a book on 

 drug therapy ; it deals alone with physical or mechanical diagnostic and thera- 

 peutic measures. The information it gives is such as you need to know every 

 day transfusion and infusion, hypodermic medication, Bier's hyperemia, explora- 

 tory punctures, aspirations, anesthesia, etc. Then follow descriptions of those 

 measures employed in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases of special regions or 

 organs: proctoclysis, cystoscopy, etc. 

 Journal American Medical Association 



"The procedures described are those which practitioners may at some time be called 

 on to perform.' 1 



