Medical Publications of F. A. Davis, Philadelphia. 



STJEWABT 



Obstetric Synopsis. 



By John S. Stewart, M.D., formerly Demonstrator of Obstetrics and 

 Chief Assistant in the Gyniecological Clinic of the Medico-Chirurgical College 

 of Philadelphia: with an introductory note by William S. Stewart, A.M., 

 M.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in the Medico-Chlrurgical College 

 of Philadelphia. 



By students this work will be found particularly useful. It is based upon 

 the teachings of such well-known authors as Playfair, Parvin, Lusk, Galabin, 

 and Cazeaux and Tarnier, and contains much new and important matter of great 

 value to both student and practitioner. 



With 42 Illustrations. 203 pages. 12mo. Handsomely bound in Dark- 

 Blue Cloth. No. 1 in the Physicians' and Students' Ready -Reference Series. 



Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.00, net; in Great 

 Britain, 6s.; France, 6 fr. 20. 



DeLaskie INIiLLER, M.D., Professor of 

 Obstetric?;, Rush Medical Collet^e, Chicago, 

 111., says: — "I have examined tlie 'Obstetric 

 Synopsis,' by John 8. Stewart, M.D., and it 

 gives uie pleasure to characterize the work as 

 systematic, concise, perspicuous, and authen- 

 tic. Among manuals it is one of the best." 



It is well written, excellently illustrated, 

 and fullv up to date in everv respect. Here 

 we find all the essentials of Obstetrics in a 

 nutshell. Anatomy, Bmliryology, Physiology, 

 Pregnancy, Labor, Puerperal State, and Ob- 

 stetric Operations all being carefully and ac- 



curately described. — Buffalo Medical and 

 Surgical Journal. 



It is clear and concise. The chapter on the 

 development of the ovum is especially satis- 

 factory. The judicious use of bold-faced 

 type for headings and italics for important 

 statements gives the book a i)leasing typo- 

 graphical appearance. — Medical Record. 



This volume is done with a masterly hand. 

 The scheme is an excellent one. The whole 

 is freely and most admirably illustrated with 

 well-drawn, new engravings, and the book is 

 of a very convenient size. — St. Louis Medical 

 and Surgical Journal. 



ULTZ3IANN 



The Neuroses of the Genito-Urinary System 



in the Male. 



With Sterility and iMPOTryNCE. 



By Dr. R. Ultzmann, Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases in the Uni- 

 versity of Vienna. Translated, with the author's permission, by Gardner W. 

 Allen, M.D., Surgeon in the Genito-Urinary Department, Boston Dispensary. 



Full and complete, j^et terse and concise, it handles the subject with such 

 a vigor of touch, such a clearness of detail and description, and such a directness 

 to the result, that no medical man who once takes it up will be content to lay it 

 down until its ptM'usal is complete, — nor will one reading be enough. 



Professor Ultzmann has approached the subject from a somewhat different 

 point of view from most surgeons, and this gives a peculiar value to the work. 

 It is believed, moreover, that there is no convenient hand-book in English treat- 

 ing in a broad manner the Genito-Urinary Neuroses. 



Synopsis op Contents. — First Part — I. Chemical Changes in the Urine in 

 Cases of Neuroses. II. Neuroses of the Urinary and of the Sexual Organs, 

 classified as : (1) Sensory Neuroses; (2) Motor Neuroses ; (3) Secretory Neuroses. 

 Second Part — Sterility and Impotence. The treatment in all cases is described 

 clearly and minutely. 



Illustrated. i2mo. Handsomely bound in Dark-Blue Cloth. No. 4 in the 

 Physicians' and Students' Ready-Reference Series. 



Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.00, net ; in Great 

 Britain, 6s. ; in France, 6 fr. 20. 



This book is to be highly recoinmended, 

 owing to its clearness and brevity. Altogether, 

 we do not know of any book of the same size 

 which contains so much useful information in 

 such a short space. — Medical JVeum. 



Its scope is large, not being confined to the 

 one condition, — neurasthenia, — but embracing 

 all of the neuroses, motor and sensory, of the 

 genito-urinary organs in the male. No one 

 who has read after Dr. Ultzmann need be re- 



minded of his delightful manner of presenting 

 his thoughts, which ever sparkle with original- 

 ity and appositeness.— TFeeA;?2/ Med. Review. 



It engenders sound pathological teaching, 

 and will aid in no small degree in throwing 

 light on the manacienient of many of the dif- 

 ficult and more refractory cases of the classes 

 to which these essays especially x&iev.—The 

 Medical Age. 



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