CATALOGUE 



OF 



MEDICAL WORKS 



ANSTIE. 



Neuralgia, and Diseases which resemble it. 

 BY FRANCIS E. ANSTIE, M. D., F. R. C. P., 



Senior Assistant Physician to Westminster Hospital ; Lecturer on Materia Medica in "Westminster 

 Hospital School; and Physician to the Belgrave Hospital for Children; Editor of "The 

 Practitioner" (London), etc. 



1 vol., 12mo. Cloth, $2.50. 



" It is a valuable contribution to scientific medicine." The Lancet (London). 



BARKER. 

 The Puerperal Diseases, cumcai 



delivered at Bellevue Hospital. 



BY FORDYCE BARKER, M. D., 



Clinical Professor of Midwifery and the Diseases of Women in the Bellevue Hospital Medical 

 College; Obstetric Physician to Bellevue Hospital; Consulting Physician to the New York 

 State Woman's Hospital; Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine ; formerly.Presi- 

 dent of the Medical Society of the State of New York ; Honorary Fellow of the Obstetrical 

 Societies of London and Edinburgh; Honorary Fellow of the Royal Medical Society of 

 Athens, Greece, etc., etc., etc. 



1 vol., 8vo. Cloth. 526 pages. Price, $5.00. 



" For nearly twenty years it has been my duty, as well as my privilege, to give clinical lect- 

 ures at Bellevue Hospital, on midwifery, the puerperal and the other diseases of women. This 

 volume is made up substantially from phonographic reports of the lectures which I have given 

 on the puerperal diseases. Having had rather exceptional opportunities for the study of these 

 diseases, I have felt it to be an imperative duty to utilize, so far as lay in my power, the advan- 

 tages which I have enjoyed for the promotion of science, and, I hope, for the interests of human- 

 ity. In many subjects, such as albuminuria, convulsions, thrombosis, and embolism, septicaemia, 

 and pyaemia, the advance of science has been so rapid as to make it necessary to teach something 

 new every year. Those, therefore, who have formerly listened to my lectures on these subjects, 

 and who now do me the honor to read this volume, will not be surprised to find, in many par- 

 ticulars, changes in pathological views, and often in therapeutical teaching, from doctrines before 

 inculcated. At the present day, for the first time in the history of the world, the obstetric de- 

 partment seems to be assuming its proper position, as the highest branch of medicine, if its rank 

 be graded by its importance to society, or by the intellectual culture and ability required, as 

 compared with that demanded of the physician or the surgeon. A man may become eminent as 

 a physician, and yet know very little of obstetrics; or he may be a successful and distinguished 

 surgeon, and be quite ignorant of even the rudiments of obstetrics. But no one can be a really 

 able obstetrician unless he be both physician and surgeon. And, as the greater includes the less, 

 obstetrics should rank as the highest department of our profession." From Author's Preface. 



On Sea-sickness. 



BY FORDYCE BARKER, M. D. 

 1 vol., 16mo. 36 pp. Flexible Cloth, 75 cents. 



Reprinted from the NEW YORK MEDICAL JOURNAL. By reason of the great demand for the 

 number of that journal containing the paper, it is now presented in book form, with such pre- 

 scriptions added as the author has found useful in relieving the suffering from sea-sickness. 



