is V'ERY MUCH LESS than that of any visiting list ever published. Every 

 physician will at once understand that as soon as a section is full it can 

 be taken out, filed away, and another inserted without the least incon- 

 venience or trouble. 



This Visiting List contains a Calendar for the last six months 

 of last year, all of this, and next year; Table of Signs to be used 

 in Keeping Accounts; Dr. Ely's Obstetrical Table; Table of Cal- 

 culating the Number of Doses in a given R, etc., etc.; for converting 

 Apothecaries' Weights and Measures into Grammes ; Metrical Avoirdu- 

 pois and Apothecaries' Weights ; Number of Drops in a Fluidrachm ; 

 -Graduated Doses for Children ; Graduated Table for Administering 

 Laudanum ; Periods of Eruption of the Teeth ; The Average Frequency 

 of the Pulse at Different Ages in Health; Formula and Doses of Hypo- 

 dermic Medication; Use of the Hypodermic Syringe; Formulae and 

 Doses of Medicine for Inhalation; Formulae for Suppositories for the 

 Rectum ; The Use of the Thermometer in Disease ; Poisons and their 

 Antidotes ; Treatment of Asphyxia ; Anti-Emetic Remedies ; Nasal 

 Douches ; Eye-Washes. 



Most Convenient Time- and Labor- Saving List Issued. 



It is evident to eve^ one that this is, beyond question, the best and 

 most convenient time- and labor-saving Physicians' Record Book ever 

 published. Ph3 r sicians of many years' standing and with large practices 

 pronounce this the Best List they have ever seen. It is handsomely 

 bound in fine, strong leather, with flap, including a pocket for loose 

 memoranda, etc., and is furnished with a Dixon lead-pencil of excellent 

 quality and finish. It is compact and convenient for carrying in the 

 pocket. Size, 4 x 6| inches. 



IN THREE STYI^ES-KET PRICES, POST-PAID. 



U. S. and Canada. Great Britain. France. 



No. i. Regular Size, for 70 patients daily each month for one year, SI. 25 5s. 3. 7 fr. 75 



"No. 2. Large Size, for 105 patients daily each month for one year, 1.5O 6s. 6. 9 fr. 35 



No. 3. In which "The Blanks for Recording Visits in" are in re- 

 movable sections, as described above, ... - 1.75 7s. 3. 12 fr. 2O 



EXTRACTS FROM REVIEWS.- 



" While each page records only a week's visits, 

 "yet by an ingenious device of half leaves the names 

 -of the patients require to be written but once a 

 month, and a glance at an opening of the book 

 shows the entire visits paid to any individual in a 

 month. It will be found a great convenience." 

 Jioston Medical and Surgical Journal. 



"Everything about it is easily and quickly 

 understood." Canadian Practitioner. 



"Of the many visiting lists before the profes- 

 sion, each has some special feature to recommend 

 it. This list is very ingeniously arranged, as by a 

 series of narrow leaves following a wider one, the 

 name of the patient is written but once during the 

 month, while the account can run for thirty-one 

 days, space being arranged for a weekly debit 

 and credit summary and for special memoranda. 

 The usual pages for cash account, obstetrical 

 record, addresses, etc., are included. A large 

 amount of miscellaneous information is presented 

 in a condensed form." Occidental Medical 

 Times. 



"It is a monthly instead of a weekly record, 

 thus obviating the transferring of names oftener 

 than once a month. There is a Dr. and Cr. column 

 following each week's record, enabling the doctor 

 to carry a patient's account for an indefinite time, 

 or until he is discharged, with little trouble." 

 Indiana Medical Journal. " 



"Accounts can begin and end at any date. 

 Each name can be entered for each day of every 

 month on the same line. To accomplish this, four 

 leaves, little more than one-third as wide as the 

 usual leaf of the book, follow each page. Oppo- 

 site is a full page for the recording of special 

 memoranda. The usual accompaniments of this 

 class of books are made out with care and fitness." 

 The American Lancet. 



"This is a novel list, and an unusually con- 

 venient one." Journal of the Amer.Med.Assoc. 



"This new candidate for the favor of physi- 

 cians possesses some unique and useful points. 

 The necessity of rewriting names every week is 

 obviated by a simple contrivance in the make-up 

 of its pages, thus saving much valuable time, 

 besides reducing the bulk of the book." Buffalo 

 Medical and Surgicai Journal. 



"This list is an entirely new departure, and 

 on a plan that renders posting rapid and easy. It 

 is just what we have often wished for, and really 

 fills a long-felt want." The Medical Waif. 



"It certainly contains the largest amount of 

 practical knowledge for the medical practitioner 

 in the smallest possible volume, besides enabling 

 the poorest accountant to keep a correct record, 

 and render a correct bill at a moment's notice." 

 Medical Chips. 



(F. A. DAVIS, Medical Publisher, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.) 



