20 D. APPLETON Gr CO.'S MEDICAL WORKS. 



ANALYSIS OF THE URINE, with Special Reference to 

 the Diseases of the Genito-Urinary Organs. By K. B. HOFMANN, Pro- 

 fessor in the University of Gratz, and R. ULTZMANN, Decent in the Uni- 

 versity of Vienna. Translated by T. BARTON BRUNE, A. M., M. D., late 

 Professor of the Practice of Medicine in the Baltimore Polyclinic and Post- 

 Graduate Medical School, etc., and H. HOLBROOK CURTIS, Ph. B., M. D., 

 Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc. 



Second edition, revised and enlarged. With 8 Lithographic Plates. 8vo, 310 pp. Cloth, $2.00. 



" Hofmann and Ultzmann's popular work on latest advances in urinary analysis. All unnecessary 



the urine needs neither criticism nor recommenda- matter has been eliminated, and the chemistry is so 



tion. Its claims have been substantiated in the simple as to be within the comprehension of all. 



offices of thousands of physicians both in Europe The translators have made a few additions which 



and America. It covers the entire field of chemical are practical and therefore useful." Canada Lan- 



and microscopical examination of urine so far as cet. 

 diagnosis is concerned, giving explicit directions as 



to details of manipulation."-//a//<a^. This w r > has lon g been standard authority. 



But the late advances m urinology have made it ne- 



" Possessed of this book, a few reagents, a mi- cessary for the American translators practically to 



croscope with glasses powerful enough to magnify become editors of a nev or second edition. They 



two or three hundred diameters, and a few test- have done their work well, and in this volume pre- 



tubes and slides, there is no good reason why every sent the profession with a reliable, practical book, 



physician should not become a good urinary ana- giving the most advanced ideas as to urinalysis and 



lyst." Mississippi Valley Medical Monthly. diagnosis of urinary troubles in simple language, 



.. ., r ., which does not require a mastery of clinical tech- 



For the every-day wants of the practitioner, we j understand."- Virginia Medical Mont hlv. 

 know of no manual on urinary analysis that equals 



Hofmann and Ultzmann's work. . . . The second " In the present edition all unnecessary matter 



edition contains all the important advances that has been eliminated, and the translators have incor- 



have been made in the examination of the urinary porated all that has recently been added to our 



constituents during the past three years. One of knowledge of the subject that will be of especial in- 



the most important sections of the work is that de- terest to the student and practitioner. A valuable 



voted to an account of the microscopical and clinical feature of the book is the illustrations, which are 



aids for the diagnosis of the different forms of albu- very fine indeed." Indiana Medical yournal. 

 minuria. The translators are to be congratulated 



on producing a very clear and readable rendering of Students and general practitioners can ask no 



the original."-CV7*/a Medical and Surgical batter working guide on the subjects treated than 



journal tnis stan dard work. The publishers present it in a 



handsome and durable form, and the colored plates 



"The second edition of this classical work on are uncommonly finished and fine." New England 



the urine will be welcomed as containing all the Medical Gazette. 



CLINICAL ELECTRO-THERAPEUTICS. (Medical and 



Surgical.) A Manual for Physicians for the Treatment more especially of 

 Nervous Diseases. By ALLAN McLANE HAMILTON, M. D., Physician in 

 charge of the New York State Hospital for Diseases of the Nervous System, 



etc., etc. 



With numerous Illustrations. I vol., 8vo. Cloth, $2. 



This work is the compilation of well-tried measures and reported cases, and is intended as a 

 simple guide for the general practitioner. It is as free from confusing theories, technical terms, 

 and unproved statements as possible. Electricity is indorsed as a very valuable remedy in certain 

 diseases, and as an invaluable therapeutical means in nearly all forms of NERVOUS DISEASE ; but 

 not as a specific for every human ill, mental and physical. 



THE ANATOMY OF INVERTEBRATED ANIMALS. 



By THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY, LL. D., F. R. S. 



I vol., I2mo. Illustrated. 596pp. Cloth, $2.50. 



" Mv object in writing the book has been to make it useful to those who wish to become ac- 

 quainted with the broad outlines of what is at present known of the morphology of the Inverte- 

 brala ; though I have not avoided the incidental mention of facts connected with their physiology 

 and their distribution. On the other hand, I have abstained from discussing questions of etiol- 

 ogy, not because I underestimate their importance, or am insensible to the interest of the great 

 problem of evolution, but because, to my mind, the growing tendency to mix up etiologies] specu- 

 lations with morphological generalizations will, if unchecked, throw biology into confusion." 

 From Preface. 



