18 I>. Appleton & Co?s Medical Publications. 



MATTDSLEY. 

 Responsibility in Mental Diseases. 



BY HENRY MAUDSLEY, M. D., 



Fellow of the Koyal College of Physicians, Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in University 

 College, London, etc., etc. Author of " Body and Mind," " Physiology and Pathology of the 

 Nervous System." 



"This book is a compact presentation of those facts and principles which re- 

 quire to be taken into account in estimating human responsibility not legal 

 responsibility merely, but responsibility for conduct in the family, the school, and 

 all phases of social relation in which obligation enters as an element. The work 

 is new in plan, and was written to supply a widely-felt want which has not 

 hitherto been met." The Popular Science Monthly. 



MARKOE. 



A Treatise on Diseases of the Bones. 



BY THOMAS M. MARKOE, M. D., 

 Professor of Surgery in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, etc. 



WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS. 



1 vol., 8vo. Cloth, $4.50. 



This valuable work is a treatise on Diseases of the Bones, embracing their 

 structural changes as affected by disease, their clinical history and treatment, in- 

 cluding also an account of the various tumors which grow in or upon them. None 

 of the injuries of bone are included in its scope, and no joint diseases, excepting 

 where the condition of the bone is a prime factor in the problem of disease. As 

 the work of an eminent surgeon of large and varied experience, it may be regarded 

 as the best on the subject, and a valuable contribution to medical literature. 



"The book which I now offer to my professional brethren contains the substance of the 

 lectures which I have delivered during the past twelve years at the college. ... I have followed 

 the leadings of my own studies and observations, dwelling more on those branches where I had 

 seen and studied most, and perhaps too much neglecting others where my own experience was 

 more barren, and therefore to me less interesting. I have endeavored, however, to make up the 

 deficiencies of my own knowledge by the free use of the materials scattered so richly through 

 our periodical literature, which scattered leaves it is the right and the duty of the systematic 

 writer to collect and to embody in any account he may offer of the state of a science at any given 

 period." Extract from Author's Preface, 



