198 GLANDS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE 



College de France, may be suggested to those possessing 

 a working knowledge of the French language ; it is entitled 

 Quatre Legons des Secretions Internes (J. B. Balliere et 

 Fils, Paris). Other books dealing with internal secretions 

 are I. G. Cobb : The Organs of Internal Secretion (William 

 Wood & Co., New York) ; S. W. Bandler: The Endocrirws 

 (W. B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia); L. Berman: The 

 Glands Regulating Personality (Macmillan & Co.) ; and 

 H. R. Harrower: The Internal Secretions in Practical 

 Medicine (Chicago Medical Book Co., Chicago). 



Among medical encyclopedias that include articles on 

 internal secretions, two may be mentioned because they 

 are recent productions. An article on ductless glands will 

 be found in volume 3 of The Oxford Medicine (Oxford 

 University Press, London), and another, in volume 3 of 

 The Nelson Loose-Leaf Living Medicine (Nelson & Co., 

 New York). 



Books dealing with various phases of medicine include 

 chapters on the ductless glands. Some of these are J. J. R. 

 Macleod: Physiology and Biochemistry in Modern Medi- 

 cine (C. V. Mosby, St. Louis) ; R. Burton-Opitz : A Text- 

 Book of Physiology (W. B. Saunders & Co., Philadelphia) ; 

 A. P. Mathews: Physiological Chemistry (William Wood 

 & Co., New York) ; L. Luciani: Human Physiology, vol- 

 ume 2 (Macmillan & Co., London) ; W. M. Bayliss: The 

 Principles of General Physiology (Longmans, Green & Co., 

 London); W. H. Howell: A Text-Book of Physiology 

 .(W. B. Saunders & Co., Philadelphia) ; W. G. MacCallum: 

 'A Text-Book of Pathology (W. B. Saunders & Co., Phila- 

 delphia) ; W. Osier : The Principles and Practice of Medi- 

 cine (D. Appleton & Co., New York) ; E. H. Starling: 



