REESE'S 

 MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE 



AND TOXICOLOGY. 



A Text-book of Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology. By 

 JOHN J. REESE, M. D., Professor of Medical Jurisprudence and 

 Toxicology in the Medical and Law Departments of the University 

 of Pennsylvania ; Vice- President of the Medical Jurisprudence So- 

 ciety of Philadelphia ; Physician to St. Joseph's Hospital ; Corres- 

 ponding Member of the New York Medico-legal Society. One 

 Volume. Demi Octavo. 606 pages. Cloth, $4.00; Leather, $5.00. 



" PROFESSOR REESE is so well known as a skilled medical jurist 

 that his authorship of any work virtually guarantees the thorough- 

 ness and practical character of the latter. And such is the case in 

 the book before us. * * * * We might call these the 

 essentials for the study of medical jurisprudence. The subject 

 is skeletonized, condensed, and made thoroughly up to the wants of 

 the general medical practitioner, and the requirements of prose- 

 cuting and defending attorneys. If any section deserves more dis- 

 tinction than any other, as to intrinsic excellence, it is that on toxi- 

 cology. This part of the book comprises the best outline of the 

 subject in a given space that can be found anywhere. As a whole, 

 the work is everything it promises and more, and considering its 

 size, condensation, and practical character, it is by far the most 

 useful one for ready reference that we have met with. It is well 

 printed and neatly bound. ^V. I '. Medical Record, Sept. I3th, 1884. 



RICHTER'S CHEMISTRY, 



A TEXT-BOOK of INORGANIC CHEMISTRY for STUDENTS. 



By PROF. VICTOR von RICHTER, 



University of Breslau, 

 AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION FROM THE THIRD GERMAN EDITION, 



By EDGAR F. SMITH, M.A., Ph.D., 



Professor of Chemistry in Wittenberg College, Spring field, Ohio; 

 formerly in the Laboratories of the University of Pennsyl- 

 vania ; Member of the Chemical Society of Berlin. 



12mo. 89 Wood-cuts and Col. Lithographic Plate of Spectra. $2.00 



In the chemical text-books of the present day, one of the striking 

 features and difficulties we have to contend with is the separate 

 presentation of the theories and facts of the science. These are 

 usually taught apart, as if entirely independent of each other, and 

 those experienced in teaching the subject know only too well the 

 trouble encountered in attempting to get the student properly in- 

 terested in the science and in bringing him to a clear comprehension 

 of the same. In this work of PROF. VON RICHTER, which has been 

 received abroad with such hearty welcome, two editions having 

 been rapidly disposed of, theory and fact are brought close together, 

 and their intimate relation clearly shown. From careful observa- 

 tion of experiments and their results, the student is led to a correct 

 understanding of the interesting principles of chemistry. 



In preparation, "ORGANIC CHEMISTRY,' By the 

 author. Translated. 



