FOR INDEX OF SPECIAL TABLES AND 

 IMPORTANT DEFINITIONS, CLASSIFYING LARGE 

 NUMBERS OF FACTS. SEE PAGE XVL 



From The Practitioner, Lonaon. 



" The language of medicine changes so quickly with the advance of knowledge that for practitioners who wish 

 to keep fairly abreast of scientific progress a good medical dictionary is not so much a luxury as a necessity of intellec- 

 tual life. Dr. (ieorge M. Gould, who is one of the leading ophthalmic surgeons in the United States, and editor of 

 the Medical News, has in the work liefore us presented the profession with the completest lexicon of medical termin 



ology that exists in the F.nglrth language Dr. Gould has done for our medical language what 1 >r. 



Murray is doing for th<- mother tongue of English-speaking peoples. It need only be added that the work is printed 

 in a clear type that I" to the careful regard of the author, as an ophthalmologist, for the reader's eyes, and 



b 'k'ot up' in a style sufficiently handsome to make it an ornament to the hook-shelf and strong enough to withstand 

 tli' wear and tear of daily use." 



