PHYSIOLOGICAL TEXT-BOOKS, 



DALTON'S PHYSIOLOGY. 

 HUMAN P~HYSIOLOGY. 



DESIGNED FOR THE USE OF STUDENTS AND PRACTITIONERS OF MEDICINE. 

 BY JOHN C. DALTON, M.D., 



Professor of Physiology in the College of Physicians aud Surgeons, New York. 



Fourth Edition, Revised and Enlarged. 



With Two Hundred and Seventy-four Original Illustrations. In one beautifully 

 printed octavo volume of 695 pages. Cloth, $5.25; Leather, $6.25. 



This is the fourth edition of an excellent book. 

 The author has not been content with merely adopt- 

 ing the current theories of the day, and the experi- 

 ments of other physiologists, but he has experi- 

 mented extensively himself, and discusses almost 

 every part of the subject originally, ably, and inde- 

 pendently. We have no better work of its size in our 

 country. The illustrations, which number 274, are 

 very good, and contribute greatly to the elucidation 

 of the text. The plan of the work has the advan- 

 tage of great simplicity. It is admirably adapted, as 

 a strictly physiological work, to the purposes of the 



student or the medical practitioner. London Lancet 

 Jan. 4, 18C8. 



A volume which is certainly a model of conciseness 

 and perspicuity. .ZV. Y. Journal of Psychological 

 Medicine, Jan., 1868. 



Dalton's Physiology is, beyond all doubt, the best 

 work on the subject that has appeared in this coun- 

 try. Iowa Medical Journal, April, 1868. 



One of the best text-books on Physiology that we 

 have in the English language Chicago Medical Ex- 

 aminer, Oct., 1867. 



CARPENTER'S PHYSIOLOGY. 

 PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY, 



WITH THEIR CHIEF APPLICATIONS TO PSYCHOLOGY, PATHOLOGY, THERA- 

 PEUTICS, HYGIENE, AND FORENSIC MEDICINE. 



BY WILLIAM B. CARPENTER, M.D., F.R.S., 



Examiner in Physiology and Comparative Anatomy in the University of London. &c. 



EDITED, WITH ADDITIONS, BY FRANCIS G. SMITH, M.D., 

 Professor of the Institutes of Medicine in the University of t'ennsjlvania. 



With nearly 300 Illustrations on Stone and Wood. In one handsome octavo volume of 

 900 pages. Cloth, $5.50; Leather, $6.50. 



The most complete work on the science in our Ian- 

 guage. Am. Med. Journal. 



The most complete exposition of physiology which 

 any language can at present give. Brit, and For. 

 Med.-Chirurg. Review. 



It now certainly presents the most complete trea- 

 tise on the subject within the reach of the American 

 reader ; and while, for availability as a text-book, we 

 may perhaps regret its growth in bulk, we are sure 

 that the student of physiology will feel the impossi- 

 bility of presenting a thorough digest of the facts of 



the science within a more limited compass Medi- 

 cal Examiner. 



The greatest, the most reliable, and the best book 

 on the subject which we know of in the English 

 language. Stethoscope. 



The most complete work now extant in our lan- 

 guage. N. 0. Med. Register. 



We do not hesitate a moment in pronouncing it 

 e best text-book in the English language. St. 



the 



Louis Med. and Surg. Journal. 



CARPENTER'S COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY. 

 PRINCIPLES OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY. 



BY WILLIAM B. CARPENTER, M.D., F.R.S., Ac. 



With 309 Engravings on Wood. In one handsome octavo volume of 752 pages. Cloth, $5.00. 

 Without pretending to it. it is an Encyclopedia of 



the subject, accurate and complete in all respects a 

 truthful reflection of the advanced state at which 

 the science has now arrived. Dublin Quarterly 

 Journal of Medical Science. 



A truly magnificent work-in itself a perfect phy- 

 siological study. Ranking' s Abstract. 



This work stands without its fellow. It is one few 

 men in Europe could have undertaken ; it is one no 

 man, we believe, could have brought to so successful 

 an issue as Dr. Carpenter. It required for its pro- 

 duction a physiologist at once deeply read in the 

 labors of others, capable of taking a general, critical, 



and unprejudiced view of those labors, and of com- 

 bining the varied heterogeneous materials at his dis- 

 posal, so as to form an harmonious whole. We feel 

 that this abstract can give the reader a very imper- 

 fect idea of the fulness of this work, and no idea of 

 its unity, of the admirable manner in which material 

 has been brought, from the most varied sources, to 

 conduce to its completeness, of the lucidity of the 

 reasoning it contains, or of the clearness of language 

 in which the whole is clothed. Not the profession 

 only, but the scientific world at large, must feel 

 deeply indebted to Dr. Carpenter for this jrn-at work. 

 It must, indeed, add largely even to his high reputa- 

 tion. Medical Times. 



HENRY C. LEA, Philadelphia. 



