D. APPLETON <S- COSS MEDICAL WORKS. 



A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE DISEASES OF 



CHILDREN. Third American from the eighth German edition. Revised 

 and enlarged. Illustrated by Six Lithographic Plates. By ALFRED 

 VOGEL, M. D., Professor of Clinical Medicine in the University of Dorpat, 

 Russia. Translated and edited by H. RAPHAEL, M. D., late House Sur- 

 geon to Bellevue Hospital ; Physician to the Eastern Dispensary for the 

 Diseases of Children, etc., etc. 



I vol., 8vo, 640 pp. Cloth, $4.50 ; sheep, $5.50. 



derived from the possession of this work." Buffalo 

 Medical and Surgical Journal. 



"'Vogel's Treatise on Diseases of Children' 

 has a world-wide reputation, having appeared in the 

 Russian, German, Dutch, and English languages. 

 This is a deserved success, for it is a book admira- 

 bly adapted to the wants both of the practitioner 

 and student. The present edition is brought well 

 up to the present state of pathological knowledge, 

 it is complete without prolixity, and the book bears 

 upon its pages the evidence of the work of a skillful 

 and experienced clinical practitioner. . . . We 

 would most heartily commend the book as one of 

 the most valuable upon the subject, and indeed few 

 physicians can afford to forego the advantages to be 



" This is indeed a valuable addition to the litera- 

 ture of Paediatrics. ... In this latest edition (36 

 American) much has been added to the chapters on 

 Artificial Nutrition, a subject of deep interest to the 

 practitioner, on Difficulties of Dentition, and on 

 Nervous Diseases of Children. . . . This alone 

 should be worth the price of the book, as the treat- 

 ment of diseases of children is too much after the 

 stereotyped fashion of the last century." Darners 

 Texas Medical Journal. 



THE NEW YORK MEDICAL JOURNAL: A Weekly 

 Review of Medicine. Edited by FRANK P. FOSTER, M. D. 



THE NEW YORK MEDICAL JOURNAL, now in the twenty-third year of its publication, is pub- 

 lished every Saturday, each number containing twenty-eight large double-columned pages of 

 reading matter. By reason of the condensed form in which the matter is arranged, it contains 

 more reading matter than any other journal of its class in the United States. It is' also more 

 freely illustrated, and its illustrations are generally better executed, than is the case with other 

 weekly journals. 



REASONS WHY PHYSICIANS SHOULD SUBSCRIBE FOR THE JOURNAL. 



BECAUSE : It is the LEADING JOURNAL of America, and contains more reading matter 

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BECAUSE : Its " Original Articles " are the results of scientific observation and research, and 

 are of infinite practical value to the general practitioner. 



BECAUSE: The "Reports on the Progress of Medicine," which are published from time to 

 time, contain the most recent discoveries in the various departments of medicine, and are 

 ' written by practitioners especially qualified for the purpose. 



BECAUSE: The column devoted in each number to "Therapeutical Notes " contains a re'sumj 

 of the practical application of the most recent therapeutic novelties. 



BECAUSE : The Society Proceedings, of which each number contains one or more, are reports 

 of the practical experience of prominent physicians who thus give to the profession the results 

 of certain modes of treatment in given cases. 



BECAUSE : The Editorial Columns are controlled only by the desire to promote the welfare, 

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 the best interests of the profession. 



BECAUSE : Nothing is admitted to its columns that has not some bearing on medicine, or is not 

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BECAUSE: It is published solely in the interests of medicine, and for the upholding of the 

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