22 



BLANCHARD ft LEA'S MEDICAL 



MEIGS (CHARLES DJ..M. D., 



Lately Professor of Obstetrics, &c.,"in Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. 



ON THE NATURE, SIGNS, AND TREATMENT OF CHILDBED 



FEVER. In a Series of Letters addressed to the Students of his Class. In one handsome 

 octavo volume, extra cloth, of 365 pages. $2 50. 



The instructive and interesting author of this 

 work, whose previous labors have placed his coun- 

 trymen under deep and abiding obligations, again 



lectable book. * * * This treatise upon child- 

 bed fevers will have an extensive sale, being des- 

 tined, as it deserves, to find a place in the library 



of every practitioner who scorns tolag in the rear. 

 Nashville Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



challenges their admiration in the fresh and vigor- 

 ous, attractive and racy pages before us. It is a de- 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR J WITH COLORED PLATES. 



A TREATISE ON ACUTE AND CHRONIC DISEASES OF THE NECK 



OF THE UTERUS. With numerous plates, drawn and colored from nature in the highest 

 style of art. In one handsome octavo volume, extra cloth. $4 50. 



MACLISE (JOSEPH), SURGEON. 

 SURGICAL ANATOMY. Forming one volume, very large imperial quarto, 



With sixty-eight large and splendid Plates, drawn in the best style and beautifully colored. Con- 

 taining one hundred and ninety Figures, many of them the size of life. Together with copious 

 and explanatory letter-press. Strongly and handsomely bound in extra cloth, being one of the 

 cheapest and best executed Surgical works as yet issued in this country. $11 00. 



Gentlemen preparing for service in the field or hospital will find these plates 

 of the highest practical value, either for consultation in emergencies or to refresh 

 their recollection of the dissecting room. 



%* The size of this work prevents its transmission through the post-office as a whole, but those 

 who desire to have copies forwarded by mail, can receive them in five parts, done up in stout 

 wrappers. Price $9 00. 



One of the greatest artistic triumphs of the age 

 in Surgical Anatomy. Britis h American Medical 

 Journal. 



No practitioner whose means will admit should 

 fail to possess it. Ranking' & Abstract. 



arallel in point of accu- 

 Inglish language. N. Y. 



we have not language to do it justice. Ohio Medi- 

 cal and Surgical Journal. 



The most accurately engraved and beautifully 

 colored plates we have ever seen in an American 

 book one of the best and cheapest surgical works 

 ever published. Buffalo Medical Journal. 



It is very rare that so elegantly printed, so well 

 illustrated, and BO useful a work, is offered at so 

 moderate a price. Charleston Medical Journal. 



Its plates can boast a superiority which places 

 them almost beyond the reach of competition .Medi- 

 cal Examiner. 



Country practitioners will find these plates of im- 

 mense value. N. Y. Medical Gazette. 



A work which has no j 

 racy and cheapness in the 

 Journal of Medicine. 



We are extremely gratified to announce to th 

 profession the completion of this truly magnificent 

 work, which, as a whole, certainly stands unri- 



Too much cannot be said in its praise; indeed, W "J*> "'"Y"' f aa tt *""""*> ^* *"; -"> ""*- 



vailed, both for accur-acy of drawing, beauty of 



coloring, and all the requisite explanations of tha 

 subject in hand. Tht Neu Orleans Medical and 

 Surgical Journal. 



This is by far the ablest work on Surgical Ana- 

 tomy that has come under our observation. W 

 know of no other work that would justify a stu- 

 dent, in any degree, for neglect of actual dissec- 

 tion. In those sudden emergencies that BO often 

 arise, and which require the instantaneous command 

 of minute anatomical knowledge, a work of this kind 

 keeps the details of the dissecting-room perpetually 

 fresh in the memory .Tht Western Journal of Mt&*~ 

 cine and Surgery. 



MILLER (HENRY), M. D., 



Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children in the University of Louisville. 



PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OP OBSTETRICS, &c. ; including the Treat- 



ment of Chronic Inflammation of the Cervix and Body of the Uterus considered as a frequent 

 cause of Abortion. With about one hundred illustrations on wood. In one very handsome oc- 

 tavo volume, of over 600 pages, extra cloth. $3 75. 



We congratulate the author that the task is done. 

 We congratulate him that he has given to the medi- 

 cal public a work which will secure for him a high 

 and permanent position among the standard autho- 

 rities on the principles and practice of obstetrics. 

 Congratulations are not less due to the medical pro- 

 fession of this country, on the acquisition of a trea- 

 tise embodying the results of the studies, reflections, 

 and experience of Prof. Miller. Buffalo Medical 

 Journal. 



In fact, this volume must take its place among the 

 tandard systematic treatises on obstetrics ; a posi- 



tion to which its merits justly entitle it. The Cin- 

 cinnati Lancet and Observer. 



A most respectable and valuable addition to our 

 home medical literature, and" one reflecting credit 

 alike on the author and the institution to which he 

 is attached. The student will find in this work a 

 most useful guide to his studies; the country prac- 

 titioner, rusty in his reading, can obtain from its 

 pages a fair resume of the modern literature of the 

 science; and we hope to see this American produc- 

 tion generally consulted by the profession. V*. 

 Med. Journal. 



MACKENZIE (W.), M.D., 



Surgeon Oculist in Scotland in ordinary to Her Majesty, &c. &c. 



A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES AND INJURIES OF THE 



EYE. To which is prefixed an Anatomical Introduction explanatory of a Horizontal Section of 

 the Human Eyeball, by THOMAS WHARTON JONES, F. R. S. From the Fourth Revised and En- 

 larged London Edition. With Notes and Additions by ADDINELL HEWSON, M. D., Surgeon to 

 Wills Hospital, &c. &c. In one very large and handsome octavo volume, extra cloth, with plates 

 and numerous wood-cuts. $5 25. 



The treatise of Dr. Mackenzie indisputably holds I We consider it the duty of every one who has the 

 the firstplace, and forms, in respect of learning and love of his profession and the welfare of his patient 

 research, an Encyclopaedia unequalled in extent by | at heart, to make himself familiar with this the most 



any ot 

 Dix 



other work of the kind,eitherEnglish or foreign, complete work in the English language upon thedis- 

 ixon on Diseases of the Ey. \ eases of the eye. Med. Times and Gazettt. 



