LINDSAY & BLAKISTON, 



PHILADELPHIA, 



PUBLISH 



HOPE'S PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY, 



ADAPTED TO 



FORBES, TWEEDIE, CONOLLY, AND DUNGLISON'S CYCLO- 

 PEDIA OF PRACTICAL MEDICINE AND ANDRAL'S 

 ELEMENTS. 



With two hundred and sixty beautifully colored illustrations. 



Edited by L. M< LAWSON, M. D., 

 Professor of General and Pathological Anatomy in the Transylvania University. 



The additions to the text made by the American editor, are judicious, and in 

 keeping with the plan and spirit of the original. Dr. Lawson has succeeded in 

 obtaining very accurate fac similes of the illustrations, by which the work is 

 accompanied ; the execution of which is but little inferior to those of the London 

 edition. The execution of the work throughout does, in fact, great credit to its 

 editors as well as publishers, and we trust that their very commendable enter- 

 prise may be rewarded by a ready sale of the correct and beautiful, and, at the 

 same time, cheap edition they have presented to the profession of the very 

 valuable treatise of Dr. Hope. -American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 



THE PRINCIPLES OF PATHOLOGY 



AND PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. 



BY JOHN MACKINTOSH, M. D., &c. 



Fourth American, from the last London edition, with notes and additions, 



By SAMUEL GEORGE MORTON, M. D., &c. 



In one volume, 8vo. 



That this volume should have passed to a fourth edition in this country, is a 

 strong proof of its popularity. It is a valuable epitome of medical practice, 

 founded upon the most approved pathology, the state of which at the present 

 day it very accurately represents. No better book can be purchased by the 

 student than this. The author was a man of great learning, indefatigable zeal, 

 and extensive practice. As a pathologist he was able, warm and enthusiastic. 

 He writes agreeably, with clearness and vigor, and his book bears the marks 

 at once of thought, close and correct observation, ample experience, and accu- 

 rate knowledge of past and actual pathology. The American editor has added 

 much valuable matter. The work is one of the most useful text-books on the 

 subject of which it treats, extant in our tongue, and should be in the hands of 

 every student, and on the shelves of every medical library. New York Journal 

 of Medical Science. 



