D. APPLETON fr CO.'S MEDICAL WORKS. 



19 



THE METHODS OF BACTERIOLOGICAL INVESTI- 



GATION. By FERDINAND HUEPPE, Decent in Hygiene and Bacteriology 

 in the Chemical Laboratory of R. Fresenius, at Wiesbaden. Written at the 

 request of Dr. ROBERT KOCH. Translated by HERMANN M. BIGGS, M. D., 

 Instructor in the Carnegie Laboratory, and Assistant to the Chair of Patho- 

 logical Anatomy in Bellevue Hospital Medical College. 

 8vo, 218 pp. With 31 Illustrations. Cloth, $2.50. 



' This is the best book so far available in Eng- of author, and is one which no student of pathol- 



lish, being better adapted to the general student who ogy can afford to be without. The translation 



undertakes the study from first principles." North seems to have been most acceptably made." Medi- 



Carolina Medical journal. cat Press of Western New York. 



" All students of bacteriology will at once place O f the many works that have recently appeared 



this volume on their tables as indispensable for their Qn the subject of bacterial technology, this one cer- 



most accurate and rapid study. "American Lancet. taimy meets the requ irements of a practical guide 



"The work is written by one who thoroughly and book of reference ; . . . the merits of the work 



understands his subject and puts it clearly before the are decided, and should secure for it the reputation 



student." Pacific Medical and Surgical Journal it deserves." Atlanta Medical and Surgical 



and Western Lancet. Journal. 



" He has sifted the whole of the scattered and < The book treats the subject in an exceedingly 



sometimes almost inaccessible literature of the sub- c i ear an d comprehensive manner, and leaves little to 



ject, and has furnished the independent investigator be desired by the beginner, and is a complete guide 



a most valuable book, useful alike to the practitioner to those wishing to work out any of the innumerable 



and to the student, as a trustworthy introduction problems connected with the life-history of the 



into this territory. "College and Clinical Record. bacteria. . . . The translation seems to be well 



" To those who wish to have more than a mere done." American Journalofthe Medical Sciences. 



" As a whole, the book, written at Professor tation of it as is found in the present volume a wide 

 Koch's request, reflects credit on the master's choice popularity." New England Medical Gazette. 



HEALTH PRIMERS. Edited by J. LANGDON DOWN, M. D., 

 F. R. C. P. ; HENRY POWER, M. B., F. R. C. S. ; J. MORTIMER-GRANVILLE, 

 M. D. ; JOHN TWEEDY, F. R. C. S. 



In square i6mo volumes. Cloth, 40 cents each. 



Though it is of the greatest importance that books upon health should be in the highest degree 

 trustworthy, it is notorious that most of the cheap and popular kind are mere crude compilations 

 of incompetent persons, and are often misleading and injurious. Impressed by these considera- 

 tions, several eminent medical and scientific men of London have combined to prepare a series of 

 HEALTH PRIMERS of a character that shall be entitled to the fullest confidence. They are to be 

 brief, simple, and elementary in statement, filled with substantial and useful information suitable 

 for the guidance of grown-up people. Each primer will be written by a gentleman specially com- 

 petent to treat his subject, while the critical supervision of the books is in the hands of a commit- 

 tee who will act as editors. 



As these little books are produced by English authors, they are naturally based very much 

 upon English experience, but it matters little whence illustrations upon such subjects are drawn, 

 because the essential conditions of avoiding disease and preserving health are to a great degree 

 everywhere the same. 



Volumes now ready. 

 I. EXERCISE AND TRAINING. 

 II. ALCOHOL : ITS USE AND ABUSE. 



III. PREMATURE DEATH : ITS PROMOTION AND PREVENTION. 



IV. THE HOUSE AND ITS SURROUNDINGS. 



V. PERSONAL APPEARANCE IN HEALTH AND DISEASE. 

 VI. BATHS AND BATHING. 

 VII. THE SKIN AND ITS TROUBLES. 

 VIII. THE HEART AND ITS FUNCTIONS. 

 IX. THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. 



