D. APPLE TON 6- CO. 'S MEDICAL WORKS. 



"The work shows great care in 

 its preparation. We predict for it a 

 large sale among the more progres- 

 sive practitioners." Michigan Medi- 

 cal News. 



" We are acquainted with no re- 

 cent work which deals with the sub- 

 ject so thoroughly as this ; hence, it 

 should commend itself to a large class 

 of persons, not merely specialists, but 

 those who aspire to keep posted in 3] 

 all important advances in the science 

 and art of medicine." Maryland 

 Medical Journal. 



"This work was originally ad- 

 dressed to medical under-graduates, 

 but it will be equally interesting and 

 valuable to medical practitioners who 

 still acknowledge themselves to be 

 & students. It is to be hoped that their 

 number is not small." New Orleans 

 Medical and Surgical Journal. 



" We think the author has cor- 

 rectly estimated the necessity for such 

 a volume, and we congratulate him 

 upon the manner in which he has 

 executed his task. 



" As a companion volume to the 

 recent works on the diseases of the 

 nervous system, it is issued in good 

 time." North Carolina Medical 

 Journal. 



' ' A close and careful study of this 

 work, we feel convinced, will impart 



to the student a large amount of practical knowledge which could not 

 be gained elsewhere, except by wading through the enormous quan- 

 tity of neurological literature which has appeared during past years, 

 a task which few would have either time or inclination to accomplish. 

 Here it will all be found condensed, simplified, and systematically 

 arranged. The nature of the work is so fully explained in its title 

 that little or nothing on that point need be said here. We will, how- 

 ever, say that the whole subject is treated in a lucid manner, and that, 

 so far as we are able to judge, nothing seems left out which could in 

 any way improve or add to the value of the book." Medical and 

 Surgical Reporter (Philadelphia). 



Th; Deep Branch of the External 

 Plantar Nerve. 



IB. 



The Small Sciatic Nerve, with its 

 Branches of Distribution and 

 Termination. 



"Dr. Ranney.has done a most useful and praiseworthy task in 

 that he will have saved many of the profession from the choice of 

 going through the research we have indicated, or remaining in igno- 

 rance of many things most essential to a sound medical knowledge." Medical Record. 



' ' We are sure that this book will be well received, and will prove itself a very useful companion both 

 for regular students of anatomy and physiology, and also for practitioners who wish to work up the diag- 

 nosis of cases of disorder of the nervous system." Canada Medical and Surgical Journal. 



" Dr. Ranney has done his work well, and given accurate information in a simple, readable style." 

 Philadelphia Medical Times. 



A MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND OTHER AD- 

 DRESSES. By Dr. B. W. RICHARDSON, M. D., M. A., F. R. S., etc., etc. 

 I vol., I2mo, 354 pp. Cloth, $1.50. 



' ' The author is so widely and favorably known 

 that any book which bears his name will receive re- 

 spectful attention. He is one of those highly edu- 

 cated yet practical, public-spirited gentlemen who 

 adorn the profession of medicine and do far more 

 than their share toward elevating its position before 

 the public. This book, owing to the character of 

 the matter considered and the author's attractive 

 style, affords means for relaxation and instruction 

 to every thoughtful person." Medical Gazette. 



" This book is made up of a number of addresses 

 on sanitary subjects, which Dr. Richardson deliv- 

 ered at various times in Great Britain, and which 

 are intended to invite attention to the pressing re- 

 forms that are making progress in medical science. 

 The work, which has the great merit of being writ- 



ten in the simplest and clearest language, gives 

 special attention to the origin and causes of diseases, 

 and a demonstration of the physical laws by which 

 they may be prevented. . . . 



" The author does not, like some members of his 

 profession, enter into a learned description of cures, 

 but traces the causes of diseases with philosophical 

 precision. The book contains what every one should 

 know, and members of the medical profession will 

 not find a study of it in vain." Philadelphia En- 

 quirer. 



" The wide study of these lectures by both the 

 profession and the laity would greatly advance the 

 interests of both by stimulating thought and action 

 respecting the most vital subjects that can engage 

 the human mind." Detroit Lancet. 



