AND SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS. 



19 



LAWRENCE (W.), F. R. S., &c. 

 A TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE EYE. Third American edition, 



much improved and enlarged. With over two hundred illustrations. By ISAAC HAYS, M. D., 

 Surgeon to Wills Hospital, Philadelphia, &c. In one very large and handsome octavo volume, 

 of over eight hundred pages. This new edition to be ready by July. 



This work, by far the largest and most comprehensive on the subject within reach of the profes- 

 sion in this country, will receive an entire revision on the part of the editor. Brought up in this 

 manner to the most advanced state of science, and presenting an equal improvement over ii> prede- 

 cessors as regards mechanical execution, it is confidently presented as worthy of the extended repu- 

 tation which it has hitherto enjoyed. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



A TREATISE ON RUPTURES; from the fifth London edition. In one octavo 



volume, sheep, 480 pages. 



LEIDY (JOSEPH), M.D. 



Professor of Anatomy in the University of Pennsylvania, &c. 



ATLAS OF PATHOLOGICAL HISTOLOGY. By GOTTLIEB GLUGE, M. D. 



Translated from the German, with Additions, by JOSEPH LEIDY, M. D , Professor of Anatomy 

 in the University of Pennsylvania. In one vol., large imperial quarto, with 320 figure*, plain 

 and colored, on twelve plates. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



HUMAN ANATOMY. By JONES QUAIN, M. D. From the fifth London edition. 



Edited by RICHARD QIJAIN, F. R. S., and WILLIAM SHARPEY, M. D., F. R. S., Professors of 

 Anatomy and Physiology, in University College, London. Revised, with Notes and Additions, 

 by JOSEPH LEIDY, M. D., Professor of Anatomy in the University of Pennsylvania. Complete in 

 two large 8vo. vols. of about 1300 pages, beautifully illustrated with over 500 engravings on wood. 



LISTON (ROBERT), F. R. S., &c. 

 LECTURES ON THE OPERATIONS OF SURGERY, and on Diseases and 



Accidents requiring Operations. Edited, with numerous Additions and Alterations, by T. D. 

 MUTTER, M. D. In one large and handsome octavo volume, of 566 pages, with 216 wood-cuts. 



It is a compendium of the modern practice of Sur- 

 gery as complete and accurate as any treatise of 

 similar dimensions in the English language. West- 



We can only say, in conclusion, that Liston's 

 Lectures, with Matter's additions, should be in 

 every surgeon's library, and in every student's 

 hand, who wishes to post up his surgical knowledge 

 to the present moment. N. Y. Journ. of Medicine. 



ern Lancet. 



LALLEMAND (M.). 

 SYMPTOMS, AND TREATMENT OF SPERMATOR- 



In one volume, octavo, 320 pages. 



THE CAUSES, 



RHCEA. Translated and edited by HENRY J. McDouGAL. 

 Second American edition. (Now Ready.) 



LARDNER (DIONYSIUS), D. C. L., Sic. 

 HANDBOOKS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY AND ASTRONOMY. 



FIRST COURSE, containing Mechanics, Hydrostatics, Hydraulics, Pneumatics, Sound, and Optics. 

 In one large royal 12mo. volume, of 750 pages, with 424 wood-cuts. SECOND COURSE, containing 

 Heat, Electricity, Magnetism, and Galvanism, one volume, large royal 12mo., of 450 pages, with 

 250 illustrations. THIRD COURSE (nearly ready), will contain Meteorology and Astronomy, with 

 numerous steel-plates and wood-cuts. Revised, with numerous Additions, by the American editor. 



The work furnishes a very clear and satisfactory 

 account of our knowledge in the important depart- 

 ment of science of which it treats. Although the 

 medical schools of this country do not include the 

 study of physics in their course of instruction, yet 

 no student or practitioner should be ignorant of its 

 laws. Besides being of constant application in prac- 

 tice, such knowledge is of inestimable utility in fa- 

 cilitating the study of other branches of science. To 

 students, then, and to those who, having already en- 

 tered upon the active pursuits of business, are desir- 

 ous to sustain and improve their knowledge of the 

 general truths of natural philosophy, we can recom- 

 mend this work as supplying in a clear and satis 



factory manner the information they desire. The 

 Virginia Med. and Surg. Journal. 



The present treatise is a most complete digest of 

 all that has been developed in relation to the great 

 forces of nature, Heat, Magnetism, and Electricity. 

 Their laws are elucidated in a manner both pleasing 

 and familiar, and at the same time perfectly intelli- 

 gible to the student. The illustrations are suffi- 

 ciently numerous and appropriate, and altogether 

 we can cordially recommend the work as well-de- 

 serving the notice both of the practising physician 

 and the student of medicine. The J\Ud. Examiner. 



