28 



BLANCHARD & LEA'S MEDICAL 



SHARPEY (WILLIAM), M. D., JONES QUAIN, M. D. f AND 



RICHARD QUAIN, F. R. S., &c. 

 HUMAN ANATOMY. Revised, with Notes and Additions, by JOSEPH LEIDT, 



M. D., Professor of Anatomy in the University of Pennsylvania. Complete in two large octavo 

 volumes, leather, of about thirteen hundred pages. Beautifully illustrated with over five hundred 

 engravings on wood. $6 00. 



SARGENT (F. W.), M. D. 



ON BANDAGING AND OTHER OPERATIONS OF MINOR SURGERY. 



Second edition, enlarged. One handsome royal 12mo. vol., of nearly 400 pages, with 182 wood- 

 cuts. Extra cloth, $1 40; leather, $1 50. 



Sargent's Minor Surgery has always been popular, 

 and deservedly so. It furnishes that knowledge of the 

 most frequently requisite performances of surgical 

 art which cannot be entirely understood by attend- 

 ing clinical lectures. The art of bandaging, which 

 is regularly taught in Europe, is very frequently 

 overlooked by teachers in this country ; the student 

 and junior practitioner, therefore, may often require 

 that knowledge which this little volume so tersely 

 and happily supplies. Charleston, Med. Journ. and 

 Review, March, 1856. 



A work that has been so long and favorably knowa 

 to the profession as Dr. Sargent's Minor Surgery, 

 needs no commendation from us. We would remark, 

 however, in this connection, that minor surgery sel- 

 dom gets that attention in our schools that its im- 

 portance deserves. Our larger works are also very 

 defective in their teaching on these small practical 

 points. This little book will supply the void which 

 all must feel who have not studied its pages. West- 

 ern Lancet^ March, 1856. 



SMITH (W. TYLER), M. D., 



Physician Accoucheur to St. Mary's Hospital, &c. 



ON PARTURITION, AND THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF 



OBSTETRICS. In one royal 12mo. volume, extra cloth, of 400 pages. $1 25. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. 



A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT 



OF LEUCORRHCEA. With numerous illustrations. In one very handsome octavo volume, 

 extra cloth, of about 250 pages. $1 50. 



SOLLY ON THE HUMAN BRAIN; its Structure, 

 Physiology, and Diseases. From the Second and 

 much enlarged London edition. In one octavi 

 volume, extra cloth, of 500 pages, with 120 wood- 

 cuts. $2 00. 



SIMON'S GENERAL PATHOLOGY, as conduc- 

 ive to the Establishment of Rational Principles 

 for the prevention and Cure of Disease. In one 

 neat octavo volume, extra cloth, of 212 pages. 

 $1 25. 



TANNER (T. H.), M. D., 



Physician to the Hospital for Women, &c. 



A MANUAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE AND PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS. 



To which is added The Code of Ethics of the American Medical Association. Second 

 American Edition. In one neat volume, small 12mo., extra cloth, 87$ cents. 



tioners, it has only to be seen, to win fer itself a 

 place upon the shelves of every medical library. 



The work is an honor to its writer, and must ob- 

 tain a wide circulation by its intrinsic merit alone. 

 Suited alike to the wants of students and practi- 



Boston Med and Surg. Journal. 



TODD (ROBERT BENTLEY), M. D., F. R. S., 



Professor of Physiology in King's College, London; and 

 WILLIAM BOWMAN, F. R. S., 



Demonstrator of Anatomy in King's College, London. 



THE PHYSIOLOGICAL ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF MAN. With 



about three hundred large and beautiful illustrations on wood. Complete in one large octavo 



volume, of 950 pages, leather. Price $4 50. 



EF 5 Gentlemen who have received portions of this work, as published in the " MEDICAL NEWS 

 AND LIBRARY," can now complete their copies, if immediate application be made. It will be fur- 

 nished as follows, free by mail, in paper covers, with cloth backs. 



PARTS I., II., III. (pp. 25 to 552), $2 50. 



PART IV. (pp. 553 to end, with Title, Preface, Contents, &c.), $2 00. 



Or, PART IV., SECTION II. (pp. 725 to end, with Title, Preface, Contents, &c.), $1 25. 



Its completion has been thus long delayed, that the 



A magnificent contribution to British medicine, 

 anu the American physician who shall fail to peruse 

 it, wiL have failed to read one of the most instruc- 

 tive books of the nineteenth century. N. O. Med 

 and Surg. Journal, Sept. 1857. 



It is more concise than Carpenter's Principles, and 

 more modern than the accessible edition of Mflller's 

 Elements; its details are brief, but sufficiei t; its 

 descriptions vivid ; its illustrations exact and copi- 

 ous ; and its language terse and perspicuous. 

 Charleston Med. Journal, July, 1857. 



We know of nc work on the subject of physiology 

 so well adapted to the wants of the medical student. 



authors might secure accuracy by personal observa- 

 tion. St. Louis Med. and Surg. Journal, Sept. '57. 



Our notice, though it conveys but a very feeble 

 and imperfect idea of the magnitude and importance 

 of the work now under consideration, already tran- 

 scends our limits ; and, with the indulgence of our 

 readers, and the hope that they will peruse the book 

 for themselves, as we feel we can with confidence 

 recommend it, we leave it in their hands for them 

 to judge of its merits. The Northwestern Med. and 

 Surg. Journal, Oct. 1857. 



TODD (R. B.), M. D., F. R. S., &c. 

 CLINICAL LECTURES ON CERTAIN DISEASES OF THE URINARY 



ORGANS AND ON DROPSIES. In one octavo volume. (Jztst Issued, 1857.) $1 50. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. (In Pre-SS.) 



CLINICAL LECTURES ON CERTAIN ACUTE DISEASES. In one neat 



octavo volume, to match the above. 



