HENRY C. LEA'S SON & Co.'s PUBLICATIONS Pharm., Mat. Med. 11 



PARRISH, EDWARD, 



Late Professor of the Theory and Practice of Pharmacy in the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. 



A Treatise on Pharmacy : designed as a Text-book for the Student, and as a 

 Guide for the Physician and Pharmaceutist. With many Formulae and Prescriptions. 

 Fifth edition, thoroughly revised, by THOMAS S. WIEGAND, Ph. G. In one handsome 

 octavo volume of 1093 pages, with 256 illustrations. Cloth, $5 ; leather, $6. Just ready. 



a valuable guide and compend for the physician 

 and medical student. The Physician and Surqeon, 

 April, 1884. 



It would be difficult to find a more complete 

 work, for it contains minute information upon 



A new edition of this masterly work, with nu- 

 merous additions, and so revised as to be in accord 

 with the new Pharmacopoeia and the latest teach- 

 ings in chemistry, is a publication of the first im- 

 portance. No thoroughgoing pharmacist will fail 

 to possess himself of so useful a guide to practice, 

 and no physician who properly estimates the value 

 of an accurate knowledge of the remedial agents 

 employed by him in daily practice, so far as their 

 miscibility, compatibility and most effective meth- 



every subject pertaining to pharmacy. Cincinnati 

 Medical Pieics, Jan. 1884. 



This well-known work presents itself now based 

 upon the recently revised new Pharmacopoeia. 

 Several important modifications of the internal 



ods of combination are concerned, can afford to | arrangement have been made, and we believe 

 leave this work out of the list of their works of ; they will be found to increase the practical use- 

 reference. The country practitioner, who must j fulness of the book. Each page bears evidence of 

 always be in a measure his own pharmacist, will | the care bestowed upon it, and conveys valuable 

 find it indispensable. Louisville Medical News, 1 information from the rich store of the editor's 

 March 29, 1884. j experience. In fact, all that relates to practical 



This treatise on Pharmacy is as indispensable \ pharmacy apparatus, processes and dispensing 

 to the dispensing or manufacturing druggist, and I has been arranged and described with clearness 

 student or pharmacy, as Dunglison s Medical Die- in its various aspects, so as to afford aid and advice 

 tionary is to the doctor and student of medicine, alike to the student and to the practical pharma- 



It has ceased being a literary luxury and has be- 

 come a necessity. The work is not merely a text- 

 book for pharmacy students and druggists, but is 



cist. The work is judiciously illustrated with good 

 woodcuts American Journal of Pharmacy. Janu- 

 ary, 1884. 



HERMANN, Dr. L., 



Professor of Physiology in the University of Zurich. 



Experimental Pharmacology. A Handbook of Methods for Determining the 

 Physiological Actions of Drugs. Translated, with the Author's permission, and with 

 extensive additions, by ROBERT MEADE SMITH, M. D., Demonstrator of Physiology in the 

 University of Pennsylvania. In one handsome 12mo. volume of 199 pages, with 32 

 illustrations. Cloth, $1.50. 



Prof. Hermann's handbook, which Dr. Smith has | changes produced by poisons, all are successively 

 translated and enriched with many valuable addi- passed in review in a practical instructive fashion, 



tions, will be gladly welcomed by those engaged in 

 this department of physiology. It is an excellent 

 little book, full of concise information, and it 

 should find a place in every laboratory. It ex- 

 plains the various methods and instruments used, 

 and points out what lines of investigation are to 



which speaks well for both the author and the 

 translator. The book is deserving of an enco- 

 mium as a correct exponent of the spirit and 

 tendencies of modern pharmacological research. 

 After closely perusing the pages, all laden to over- 

 flowing with the richest facts of physiological in- 



be pursued for studying different "phenomena, j vestigation, and after following the astounding 

 and also how and what particularly to observe. progress of toxic pharmacology as revealed by the 

 American Journal of the Medical Sciences, Jan. 1884. author, we feel that we are fast approaching the 

 The selection of animals and their management, | realization of that Utopian dream in which we 

 the paths of elimination and changes of poisons I behold experimental and clinical experience 

 in the body, the explanation of the symptoms pro- | firmly and inseparably united. It is a reliable, 

 dueed by poisons, alterations in tissue, in the re- concise and practical vade mccum for the time- 

 productive function and in temperature, action on j pressed worker in the laboratory. JVew Orleans 

 muscles and in nerves, anatomical and chemical | Medical and Surgical Journal, May, 1883. 



MAISCH, JOHNM., Fhar. D., 



Professor of Materia Medica and Botany in the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. 

 A Manual of Organic Materia Medica; Being a Guide to Materia Medica of 

 the Vegetable and Animal Kingdoms. For the use of Students, Druggists, Pharmacists 

 and Physicians. New edition. In one handsome royal 12mo. volume. Preparing. 



BRTJNTON, T. LATTDER, M. D., 



Lecturer on Materia Medica and Therapeutics at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, etc. 



A Manual of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, including the Pharmacy, 

 the Physiological Action and the Therapeutical Uses of Drugs. In one handsome octavo 

 volume. In press. 



BRUCE, J. MITCHELL, M. D., F. R. C. P. 



Materia Medica and Therapeutics. An Introduction to Rational Treat- 

 ment. In one pocket-size 12mo. volume of 555 pages. Limp cloth, $1.50. Just ready. 

 See Students' Series of Manuals, page 5. 



GRIFFITH, ROBERT EGLESFIELD, M. D. 



A Universal Formulary, containing the Methods of Preparing and Adminis- 

 tering Officinal and other Medicines. The whole adapted to Physicians and Pharmaceut- 

 ists. Third edition, thoroughly revised, with numerous additions, by JOHN M. MAISCH, 

 Phar. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Botany in the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. 

 In one octavo volume of 775 pages, with 38 illustrations. Cloth, $4.50 ; leather, $5.50. 



