Medical Publications of F. A. Davis, Philadelphia. 



KEATING and EDWARDS 



Diseases of the Heart and Circulation. 



In Infancy and Adolescence. With an Appendix entitled " Clinical 

 Studies on the Pulse in Childhood." 



By .John IM. Keating, M.D., Obstetrician to the Philadelphia Hospital, 

 and Lecturer on Diseases of Women and Cliildren; Surgeon to the Maternity- 

 Hospital; Physician to St. Joseph's Hospital; Fellow of the College of Physicians 

 of Philadelphia, etc.; and William A. Edwards, M.D., Instructor in Clinical 

 Medicine and Phj'-sician to the Medical Dispensary in the University of 

 Pennsylvania; Physician to St. Joseph's Hospital; Fellow of the College of 

 Physicians; formerly Assistant Pathologist to the Philadelphia Hospital, etc. 



Illustrated by Photographs and Wood-Engravings. About 325 pages. Oc- 

 Bound in Cloth. 



tavo. 



Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.50, net; in Great 

 Britain, 8s. 6d. ; in France, 9 fr. 35. 



Drs. Keating and Edwards have produced a | 

 work that will give material aid to every 

 doctor in his practice among children. The 

 style of the book is graphic and pleasing, the 

 diagnostic points are explicit and exact, and 

 the therapeutical resour(-es include the novel- 

 ties of nieilicine as well as the old and tried 

 agents. — Pittsburgh Med. Review. 



It is not a mere compilation, but a systematic 

 treatise, and bears evidence of considerable 

 labor and observation on the part of the 

 authors. Two fine photographs of dissections 

 exhiV)it mitral stenosis and mitial regurgita- 

 tion ; there are also a number of wood-cuts. 

 — Cleveland Medical Gazette. 



LIEBIG and ROHE 



Practical Electricity in Medicine ^ Surgery. 



By G. A. LiEBiG, Jr., Ph D., Assistant in Electricity, Johns Hopkins 

 University ; Lecturer on Medical Electricity, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 

 Baltimore ; Member of the American Listitute of Electrical Engineers, etc. ; and 

 George H. Rohe, 31. D., Professor of 01)stetrics and Hygiene, College of Physi- 

 cians and Surgeons, Baltimore ; Visiting Physician to Bay View and City Hos- 

 pitals ; Director of the jNIaryland Maternite ; Associate Editor "Annual of the 

 Universal Medical Sciences," etc. 



Profusely Illustrated by Wood-Engravings and Original Diagrams, and 

 published in one handsome Royal Octavo volume of 883 pages, bound in Extra 

 Cloth. 



The constantly increasing demand for this work attests its thorough relia- 

 bility and its popularity with the profession, and points to the fact that it is 

 already the standard work on this very important subject. The part on Physical 

 Electricity, written by Dr. Liebig, one of the recognized authorities on the 

 science in the United States, treats fully such topics of interest as Storage Bat- 

 teries, Dynamos, the Electric Light, and the Principles and Practice of Electrical 

 Measurement in their Relations to Medical Practice. Professor Rohe, who writes 

 on Electro-Therapeutics, discusses at length the recent developments of Electricity 

 in the treatment of stricture, enlarged prostate, uterine fibroids, pelvic cellulitis, 

 and other diseases of the male and female genito-urinary organs. The applica- 

 tions of Electricity in dermatology, as well as in the diseases of the nervous 

 system, are also fully considered. 



Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $2.00, net; in Great 

 Britain, Us. 6d. ; France, 12 fr. 40. 



In its perusal, with each succeeding page, 

 we have been more and more impiessed with 

 the fact that here, at last, we have a treatise 

 on electricity in medicine and surgery which 

 ainplv fulfills its purpose, and which is sure of 

 general adoption by reason of its thorough 

 excellence and superiority to other works in- 

 tended to cover the same' field. — Pharmaceu- 

 tical Era. 



Any physician, especially if he be a beginner 

 in electro-therapeutics, will l)e well rejiaid by 

 a careful study of this work l)y IJebig and 

 Rohe. For a work on a special" subject the 

 price is low, and no one can give a good ex- 

 cuse for remaining in ignorance of so impor- 

 tant a subject as electricity in medicine. — 

 Toledo Medical and Surgical Reporter. 



The entire work is thoroughly scientific and 

 practical, and is really what the authors have 

 aimed to produce, "a trustworthy guide to 

 the application of electricity in the "practice of 

 medicine and Surgery."'— AVi? York Medical 

 Times. 



After carefully looking over this work, we 

 incline to the belief that the intelligent physi- 

 cian who is familiar with the general subject 

 will be greatly interested and profited. — 

 American Lancet. 



(12) 



