24 BLANCHARD & LEA'S MEDICAL 



NErLL (JOHN), M. D., 



Surgeon to the Pennsylvania Hospital, See.', and 



FRANCIS GURNEY SMITH, M.D., 



Professor of Institutes of Medicine in the Pennsylvania Medical College. 



AN ANALYTICAL COMPENDIUM OF THE VARIOUS BRANCHES 



OF MEDICAL SCIENCE ; for the Use and Examination of Students. A new edition, revised 

 and improved. In one very large and handsomely printed royal 12mo. volume, of about one 

 thousand pajres, with 374 wood-cuts, extra cloth, $3 25. Strongly bound in leather, with raised 

 bands. $3 50. 



This work is again presented as eminently worthy of the favor with which it has hitherto 

 been received. As a book for daily reference by the student requiring a guide to his more elaborate 

 text-books, as a manual for preceptors desiring to stimulate their students by frequent and accurate 

 examination , or as a source from which the practitioners of older date may easily and cheaply acquire 

 a knowledge of the changes and improvement in professional science, its reputation is permanently 

 established. 

 The best work of the kind with which we are I the students is heavy, and review necessary for an 



acquainted. Med. Examiner. 



Having made free use of this volume in our ex- 

 aminations of pupils, we can speak from experi- 

 ence in recommending it as an admirable compend 

 for students, and as especially useful to preceptors 

 who examine their pupils. It will save the teacher 

 much labor by enabling him readily to recall all of 

 the points upon which his pupils should be ex- 

 amined. A work of this sort should be in the hands 

 of every one who takes pupils into his office with a 

 view of examining them; and this is unquestionably 

 the best of its class. Transylvania Med. Journal, 



In the rapid course of lectures, where work for 



examination, a compend is not only valuable, but 

 it is almost a sine qua won. The one before us is, 

 in most of the divisions, the most unexceptionable 

 of all books of the kind that we know of. The 

 newest and soundest doctrines and the latest im- 

 provements and discoveries are explicitly, though 

 concisely, laid before the student. There is a clasa 

 to whom we very sincerely commend this cheap book 

 as worth its weight in silver that class is the gradu- 

 ates in medicine of more than ten years' standing, 

 who have not studied medicine since. They will 

 perhaps find out from it that the science is not exactly 

 now what it was when they left it off. The Stetho- 

 scope. 



NELIGAN (J. MOORE), M. D., M. R. I. A., &c. 

 ATLAS OF CUTANEOUS DISEASES. In one beautiful quarto volume, extra 



cloth, with splendid colored plates, presenting nearly one hundred elaborate representations of 



disease. $4 75. 



This beautiful volume is intended as a complete and accurate representation of all the varieties 

 of Diseases of the Skin. While it can be consulted in conjunction with any work on Practice, it has 

 especial reference to the author's " Treatise on Diseases of the Skin," so favorably received by the 

 profession some years since. The publishers feel justified in saying that few more beautifully exe- 

 cuted plates have ever been presented to the profession of this country. 



Neligan's Atlas of Cutaneous Diseases supplies a I give, at a coup d'ail, the remarkable peculiarities 

 long existent desideratum much felt by the largest of each individual variety. And while thus the dis- 

 class of our profession. It presents, in quarto size, ease is rendered more definable, there is yet no loss 

 16 plates, each containing from 3 to 6 figures, and of proportion incurred by the necessary concentra- 

 forming in all a total of 90 distinct representations tion. Each figure is highly colored, and so truthful 

 of the different species of skin affections, grouped " 

 together in genera or families. The illustrations 

 have been taken from nature, and have been copied 



has the artist been that the most fastidious observer 

 could not justly take exception to the correctness of 

 the execution of the pictures under his scrutiny 



with such fidelity that they present a striking picture Montreal Med. Chronicle. 

 of life; in which the reduced scale aptly serves to 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE SKIN. Fourth 



American edition. In one neat royal 12mo. volume, extra cloth, of 334 pages. $1 25. 



SS? *, THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF I One vol. royal 12mo., extra cloth with numerous 

 THE SKELETON, AND OF THE TEETH. | illustrations. 81 25. 



PIRRIE (WILLIAM), F. R. S. E., 



Professor of Surgery in th,e University of Aberdeen. 



THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF SURGERY. Edited by JOHN 



NEILL, M. D., Professor of Surgery in the Penna. Medical College, Surgeon tothe Pennsylvania 

 Hospital, &c. In one very handsome 8vo. volume, extra cloth, of 780 pages, with 316 illustrations. 

 So 7o. 



We know of no other surgical work of a reason- i rately discussed the principles of surgery, and a 

 able size, wherein there is so much theory and prac- safe and effectual practice predicated upon them, 

 tice, or where subjects are more soundly or clearly I Perhaps no work upon this subject heretofore issued 

 taught The Stethoscope. I i s so f u n upon the sc i e nce of the art of surgery. 



Prof. Pirrie, in the work before us, has elabo- 1 Nashville Journal of Medicine and Surgery. 



PARKER (LANGSTON), 



Surgeon to the Queen's Hospital, Birmingham. 



THE MODERN TREATMENT OF SYPHILITIC DISEASES, BOTH PRI- 

 MARY AND SECONDARY; comprising the Treatment of Constitutional and Confirmed Syphi- 

 lis, by a safe and successful method. With numerous Cases, Formula, and Clinical Observa- 

 tions. From the Third and entirely rewritten London edition.- In one neat octavo volume, 

 extra cloth, of 316 pages. $1 75. 



