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LEA BROTHERS & Co.'s PUBLICATIONS Anatomy. 



ALLEN, HARRISON, M. !>., 



Professor of Physiology in the University of Pennsylvania. 



A System of Human Anatomy, Including Its Medical and Surgical 

 Relations. < For the use of Practitioners and Students of Medicine. With an Intro- 

 ductory Section on Histology. By E. O. SHAKESPEARE, M. D., Ophthalmologist to 

 the Philadelphia Hospital. Comprising 813 double-columned quarto pages, with 380 

 illustrations on 109 full page lithographic plates, many of which are in colors, and 241 

 engravings in the text. In six Sections, each in a portfolio. Section I. HISTOLOGY. 

 Section II. BONES AND JOINTS. Section III. MUSCLES AND FASCIA. Section IV. 

 ARTERIES, VEINS AND LYMPHATICS. Section V. NERVOUS SYSTEM. Section VI. 

 ORGANS OF SENSE, OF DIGESTION AND GENITO-URINARY ORGANS, EMBRYOLOGY, 

 DEVELOPMENT, TERATOLOGY, SUPERFICIAL ANATOMY, POST-MORTEM EXAMINATIONS, 

 AND GENERAL AND CLINICAL INDEXES. Price per Section, $3.50 ; also bound in one 

 volume, cloth, $23.00 ; very handsome half Eussia, raised bands and open back, $25.00. 

 For sale by subscription only. Apply to the Publishers. 



Extract from Introduction. 



It is the design of this book to present the facts of human anatomy in the manner best 

 suited to the requirements of the student and the practitioner of medicine. The author 

 believes that such a book is needed, inasmuch as no treatise, as far as he knows, contains, in 

 addition to the text descriptive of the subject, a systematic presentation of such anatomical 

 facts as can be applied to practice. 



A book which will be at once accurate in statement and concise in terms ; which will be 

 an acceptable expression of the present state of the science of anatomy ; which will exclude 

 nothing that can be made applicable to the medical art, and which will thus embrace all 

 of surgical importance, while omitting nothing of value to clinical medicine, would appear 

 to have an excuse for existence in a country where most surgeons are general practitioners, 

 and where there are few general practitioners who have no interest in surgery. 



care, and are simply superb. There is as much 

 of practical application of anatomical points to 

 the every-day wants of the medical clinician as 

 to those of the operating surgeon. In fact, few 



It is to be considered a study of applied anatomy 

 In its widest sense a systematic presentation of 

 such anatomical facts as can be applied to the 

 practice of medicine as well as of surgery. Our 

 author is concise, accurate and practical in his 

 statements, and succeeds admirably in infusing 

 an interest into the study of what is generally con- 

 sidered a dry subject. The department of Histol- 

 ogy is treated in a masterly manner, and the 

 ground is travelled over by one thoroughly famil- 

 iar with it. The illustrations are made with great 



ing 



eral practitioners will read "the work without a 

 feeling of surprised gratification that so many 

 noints, concerning which they may never have 

 thought before are so well presented for their con- 

 sideration. It is a work which is destined to be 

 the best of its kind in any language. Medical 

 Record, Nov. 25, 1882. 



CLARKE,W.B.,F.R.C.S. & LOCKWOOI>,C.B., F.R.C.8. 



Demonstrators of Anatomy at St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School, London. 

 The Dissector's Manual. In one pocket-size 12mo. volume of 396 pages, with 

 49 illustrations. Limp cloth, red edges, $1.50. See Students' Series of Manuals, page 4. 



Messrs.Clarke and Lock wood have written a book 

 that can hardly be rivalled as a practical aid to the 

 dissector. Their purpose, which is " how to de- 

 scribe the best way to display the anatomical 

 structure," has been fully attained. They excel in 

 a lucidity of demonstration and graphic terseness 

 of expression, which only a long training and 



intimate association with students could have 

 given. With such a guide as this, accompanied 

 by so attractive a commentary as Treves' Surgical 

 Applied Anatomy (same series), no student could 

 fail to be deeply and absorbingly interested in the 

 study of anatomy. New Orleans Medical and Sur- 

 gical Journal, April, 1884. 



TREVES, FREDERICK, F. JR. C. 8., . 



Senior Demonstrator of Anatomy and Assistant Surgeon at the London Hospital-. 



Surgical Applied Anatomy. In one pocket-size 12mo. volume of 540 pages, 

 with 61 illustrations. Limp cloth, red edges, $2.00. See Students' Series of Manuals, 

 page 4. 



quickened by daily use as a teacher and practi- 

 tioner, has enabled our author to prepare a work 

 which it would be a most difficult task to excel. 

 The American Practitioner, Feb. 1884. 



He has produced a work which will command a 

 larger circle of readers than the class for which it 

 was written. This union of a thorough, practical 

 acquaintance with these fundamental branches, 



CTTRNOW, JOHN, M. JD., F. R. C. P., 



Professor of Anatomy at King's College, Physician at King's College Hospital. 



Medical Applied Anatomy. In one pocket-size 12mo. volume. Preparing. 

 See Students' Series of Manuals, page 4. 



BELLAMY, EDWARD, F. R. C. S., 



Senior Assistant-Surgeon to the Charing-Cross Hospital, London. 



The Student's Guide to Surgical Anatomy : Being a Description of the 

 most Important Surgical Regions of the Human Body, and intended as an Introduction to 

 operative Surgery. In one 12mo. volume of 300 pages, with 50 illustrations. Cloth, $2.25. 



HARTSHORNE'S HANDBOOK OF ANATOMY 

 AND PHYSIOLOGY. Second edition, revised. 

 In one royal 12mo. volume of 310 pages, with 220 

 woodcuts. Cloth, $1.75. 



HORNER'S SPECIAL ANATOMY AND HISTOL- 

 OGY. Eighth edition, extensively revised and 

 modified. In two octavo volumes of 1007 pages, 

 with 320 woodcuts. Cloth, $6.00. 



