FROM MR. EDWARD ARNOLD'S LIST 



THIRD EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED. 



THE DIAGNOSIS OF 

 NERVOUS DISEASES. 



By PURVES STEWART, M.A., M.D. (Edin.), F.R.C.P., Physician 

 to Out- Patients at the Westminster Hospital ; Joint Lecturer on 

 Medicine in the Medical School ; Physician to the West End 

 Hospital for Nervous Diseases, and to the Royal National Ortho- 

 paedic Hospital; Consulting Physician to the Central London 

 Throat Hospital, vii + 477 pages, with 2 full-page Plates and 225 

 Illustrations from Original Diagrams and Clinical Photographs. 

 155. net. 



oi eliciting the many superficial and deep reflexes, of performing 

 electro-diagnosis, and so on, and the significance of these phenomena in disease, will be simply 

 invaluable. The whole book, which is beautifully illustrated and most carefully indexed, though 

 in no way intended to replace the larger text-books already in use, will be found to be a most 

 valuable supplement which we cannot too strongly commend to practitioners and students." 

 British Medical Journal. 



%* Translations of this work in German and French have recently been 

 published. 



A SYSTEM OF CLINICAL 

 MEDICINE 



DEALING WITH THE DIAGNOSIS, PROGNOSIS, AND 

 TREATMENT OF DISEASE. 



By the late THOMAS DIXON SAVILL, M.D. (Lond.). Fourth 

 Edition, Revised by AGNES SAVILL, M.A., M.D. (Glas.), and 

 others, xxviii + 948 pages. With 4 Coloured Plates and 170 

 other Illustrations. 8vo. 255. net. 



EXTRACTS FROM PRESS NOTICES OF THE NEW EDITION. 

 11 May be regarded as thoroughly up to date." British Medical Journal, 

 " Dr. Savill's book fully justifies its title, since its aims are to facilitate the clinical study ot 



disease, to assist in diagnosis, and to indicate the general lines of treatment. The new edition 



has been carefully revised, and remains as a notable contribution to the text-books of medicines, 



and a worthy memorial of its talented and lamented author." Lancet. 



" The best work on the subject of Clinical Medicine in the English language." West London 



Medical Journal. 



