14 



HENRY C. LEA'S PUBLICATIONS (Pathology). 



(SAMUEL D.}, M. D., 



Professor of Surgery in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia. 



ELEMENTS OF PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY. Third edition, 



thoroughly revised and greatly improved. In one large and very handsome octavo volume 

 of nearly 800 pages, with about three hundred and fifty beautiful illustrations, of which a 

 large number are from original drawings ; extra cloth. $4 00. 



The very beautiful execution of this valuable work, and the exceedingly low price at which it 

 is oflFered, should command for it a place in the library of every practitioner. 



To the student of medicine we would say that we 

 know of no work which we can more heartily com- 

 mend than Gross's Pathological Anatomy. Southern 

 Med. and Surg. Journal. 



The volume commends itself to the medical student ; 

 it will repay a careful perusal, and should be upon 



the book-shelf of every American physician. Charles- 

 ton Med. Journal. 



It contains much new matter, and brings down our 

 .knowledge of pathology to the latest period. London 

 Lancet. 



TONES (C. HANDFIELD), F.R.S., and SIEVEKING (ED. JET.), M.D., 



/ 



Assistant Physicians and Lecturers in St. Mary's Hospital. 



A MANUAL OF PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY. First American 



edition, revised. With three hundred and ninety-seven handsome wood engravings. In 

 one large and beautifully printed octavo volume of nearly 750 pages, extra cloth, $3 50. 



Our limited space alone restrains us from noticing 

 more at length the various subjects treated of in 

 this interesting work; presenting, as it does, an excel- 

 lent summary of the existing state of knowledge in 

 relation to pathological anatomy, we cannot too 

 strongly urge upon the student the necessity of a tho- 

 rough acquaintance with its contents. Medical Ex- 

 aminer. 



We have long had need of a hand-book of patholo- 

 gical anatomy which should thoroughly reflect the 

 present state of that science. In the treatise before 

 us this desideratum is supplied. Within the limits of 

 a moderate octavo, we have the outlines of this great 

 department of medical science accurately denned, 



and the most recent investigations presented in suffi- 

 cient detail for the student of pathology. We cannot 

 at this time undertake a formal analysis of this trea- 

 tise, as it would involve a separate and lengthy 

 consideration of nearly every subject discussed ; nor 

 would such analysis be advantageous to the medical 

 reader. The work is of such a character that every 

 physician ought to obtain it, both for reference and 

 study. N. Y. Journal of Medicine. 



Its importance to the physician cannot be too highly 

 estimated, and we would recommend our readers to 

 add it to their library as soon as they conveniently 

 can. Montreal Med. Chronicle. 



TfOKITANSKY (CARL], M.D., 



Curator of the Imperial Pathological Museum, and Professor at the University of Vienna. 



A MANUAL OF PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY. Translated by 



W. E. SWAINE, EDWARD SIEVEKING, C. H. MOORE, and 6. E. DAY. Four volumes octavo, 

 bound in two, of about 1200 pages, extra cloth. $7 50. 



GLUGE'S ATLAS OF PATHOLOGICAL HISTOLOGY. 

 Translated, with Notes and Additions, by JOSEPH 

 LEIDY, M. D. In one volume, very large imperial 

 quarto, with 320 copper-plate figures, plain and 

 colored, extra cloth. $t 00. 



SIMON'S GENERAL PATHOLOGY, as conducive to 

 the Establishment of Rational Principles for the 

 Prevention and Cure of Disease. In one octavo 

 volume of 212 pages, extra cloth. $1 25. 



WILLIAMS (CHARLES J. B.), H.D., 



Professor of Clinical Medicine in University College, London. 



PRINCIPLES OF MEDICINE. An Elementary Yiew of the Causes, 



Nature, Treatment, Diagnosis, and Prognosis of Disease; with brief remarks on Hygienics, 

 or the preservation of health. A new American, from the third and revised London edition. 

 In one octavo volume of about 500 pages, extra cloth. $3 50. 

 The unequivocal favor with which this work has 



been received by the profession, both in Europe and 



America, is one among the many gratifying evidences 



which might be adduced as going to show that there 



is a steady progress taking place in the science as well 



as in the art of medicine. St. Louis Med. and Surg. 



Journal. 

 No work has ever achieved or maintained a more 



deserved reputation. Virginia Med. and Surg. 



Journal. 



One of the best works on the subject of which it 

 treats in our language. 



It has already commended itself to the high regard 

 of the profession ; and we may well say that we 

 know of no single volume that will afford the source 

 of so thorough a drilling in the principles of practice 

 as this. Students and practitioners should make 

 themselves intimately familiar with its teachings 

 they will find their labor and study most amply 

 repaid. Cincinnati Med. Observer. 



There is no work in medical literature which can 

 fill the place of this one. It is the Primer of the 

 young practitioner, the Koran of the scientific one. 

 Stethoscope. 



A text-book to which no other in our language is 

 comparable. Charleston Med. Journal. 



The lengthened analysis we have given of Dr. Wil- 

 liams's Principles of Medicine will, we trust, clearly 



prove to our readers his perfect competency for the 

 task he has undertaken that of imparting to the 

 student, as well as to the more experienced practi- 

 tioner, a knowledge of those general principles of 

 pathology on which alone a correct practice can be 

 founded. The absolute necessity of such a work 

 must be evident to all who pretend to more than 

 mere empiricism. We must conclude by agiiin ex- 

 pressing our high sense of the immense benefit which 

 Dr. Williams has conferred on medicine by the pub- 

 lication of this work. We are certain that in the 

 present state of our knowledge his Principles of Medi- 

 cine could not possibly be surpassed. While we 

 regret the loss which many of the rising generation 

 of practitioners have sustained by his resignation of 

 the Chair at University College, it is comforting to 

 feel that his writings must long continue to exert a 

 powerful influence on the practice of that profession 

 for the improvement of which he has so assiduously 

 and successfully labored, and in which he holds so 

 distinguished a position. London Jour, of Medicine 



