SMITH, ELDER, & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. 

 ATLAS OF HISTOLOGY. 



By E. KLEIN M.D., F.R.S. 



LECTURER ON HISTOLOGY AT ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S HOSPITAL MEDICAL SCHOOL, 



AND 



By NOBLE SMITH, F.R.C.S. Edin. &c. 



FORMERLY SENIOR HOUSE-SURGEON TO ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL, AND RESIDENT MEDICAL OFFICER TO THE CHILDREN'S 

 HOSPITAL AT BRISTOL, AND THE LOCK HOSPITAL, LONDON. 



A complete Representation of the Microscopic Structure of Simple and Compound Tissues of Man and the 

 higher Animals, in carefully executed Coloured Engravings, with Explanatory Text of the Figures, 



and a concise Account of the hitherto ascertained facts in Histology. 

 Royal \to. with 48 Coloured Plates, bound in half-leather, price 4. 4*. ; or in Thirteen Parts, price 6s. each 



OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 



' We are much pleased with these plates. They give very ' This admirably executed Atlas has throughout maintained 



faithful delineations of the objects described in the text, and the high promise with which it started, and fulfils all that 



they are not overcharged. They should be on the table of every i could be expected from the joint work of our best histologist 



practitioner who desires to. make himself familiar with the pro- | and the mot accomplished of British medical draughtsmen, 



gress of Histology.' LANCET, April 26, 1879. The illustrations of the last two parts, especially devoted to the 



' We have great pleasure in drawing attention to this very \ display and brief description of the intimate structure of the 



handsome work, which is certainly the most richly illustrated i nervous centres and nerve ganglia, are admirable for the per- 



treatise on Histology which has ever been published. . . . fection and beauty of the sections and the choice of specimens, 



Mr. Noble Smith has executed drawings from the choicest as they are for the delicate skill and intimate knowledge of the 



preparations made by Dr. Klein, which in colour and form draughtsman. The text is only too shyrt for it is full of accurate, 



present to the eye precisely the same effect as the preparations recent, and lucid information. It is long since any work of 



themselves when accurately focussed. . . . The medical student ; more entirely satisfactory conception and execution has issued 



will find this work a surer guide to the knowledge of modern His- i from the English medical press. This is very high praise ; but 



tology than the older books, even those of high authority and the rare merits of this standard production deserve no less.' 



reputation.' THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF MICROSCOPICAL j BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, October 4, 1879. 



SCIENCE, October, 1880. 



With 208 Illustrations, 8vo. I2s. 



COMPENDIUM OF HISTOLOGY. 



TWENTY FOUR LECTURES. 



By HEINRJCH FREY, Professor. 



Translated from the German, by permission of the Author, by GEORGE B. CUTTER, M.D. 



With numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo. los. 6d. 



A COURSE OF PRACTICAL HISTOLOGY. 



By EDWARD ALBERT SCHAFER, 



ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 



We are very much pleased with Mr. Schafer's book. It is ; but a sound knowledge of the several structures of which the 



clearly written, well and originally illustrated, and possesses the < body is composed.' LANCET. 



merit of being both concise and complete. In conclusion, we 'Concerning Mr. Schafer's "Practical Histology" we have 



may say that any student who has gone fairly over the ground nothing to say except in praise. The book is to be thoroughly 



covered by this tieatise, will find that he has not only gained a | recommended alike to the teacher and the student, and we 



mastery over the modern methods of microscopical investigation, i believe it will lighten the task of each.' MEDICAL EXAMINER. 



Demy 8vo. 161, 



ELEMENTS OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY. 



By Dr. L. HERMANN, 



PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OK ZURICH. 



SECOND EDITION. Entirely recast from the Sixth German Edition, with very copious Additions and many additional Woodcuts, 

 by ARTHUR GAM GEE, M.D,, F.R.S. , Brackenbury Professor of Physiology in Owen's College, Manchester, and 



Examiner in Physiology in the University of Edinburgh. 



'An addition to English scientific literature of no small : Dr. Gamgee steps forward to fill the gap with a carefully con- 



value. The work is one in every way worthy of its reputation. 

 Comprehensive in its scope, it includes the by-paths as well as 

 the highways of science.' LANCET. 



'A storehouse of condensed information, admirably ar- 

 ranged. ' ACAD EM Y. 



' For a considerable time a first-class work on the Elements 



ducted and excellent translation of Prof. Hermann's deservedly 

 esteemed " Elements of Physiology," a work unequalled in the 

 care which has been bestowed on the collecting and the 

 balancing of the investigations of authors from all quarters, as 

 well as in its general construction and inherent unity of design. 

 There is no doubt that the appearance of this work has greatly 

 reduced the need for any other treatise on the Elements of 



of Physiology in our own language has been a desideratum. Physiology.' NATURE. 



London: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 Waterloo Place. 



