D. APPLETON 6- CO.'S MEDICAL WORKS. 



53 



OPERATIVE SURGERY ON THE CADAVER. By 



JASPER JEWETT GARMANY, A. M., M. D., F. R. C. S., Attending Surgeon 

 to Out-door Poor Dispensary of Bellevue Hospital; Visiting Surgeon to 

 Ninety-ninth Street Reception Hospital ; Member of the British Medical 

 Association, etc. 



Small 8vo. 150 pp. With Two Colored Diagrams showing the Collateral Circulation after 

 Ligatures of Arteries of Arm, Abdomen, and Lower Extremity. Cloth, $2.00. 



' ' To the more advanced student who has the 

 opportunity of operating on the cadaver, this work 

 will be of great value, since it reduces to a system 

 the procedure of ordinary surgical operations. To 

 the practitioner it will be valuable as a work of 

 easy reference as to the best methods of operation. 

 In fact, it should have been named a manual of 

 surgical operations. The instructions given are 

 full, yet very plain and concise, and we predict for 

 it a wide circulation." Peoria Medical Monthly. 



". . . In its necessarily limited scope it is 

 above criticism. . . . Indeed, there is nothing 

 superfluous in the book, and the busy practitioner, 

 who must do more or less surgery, would find it a 

 very useful manual for frequent reference. " Med- 

 ical Press of Western New York. ' 



"... For the student in the dead-room, or the 

 busy operating surgeon, this book is one of the 

 most reliable and handy works we have ever seen." 

 Southern Clinic. 



' ' Post-mortem surgery must always precede in- 

 telligent and successful surgery. No more accept- 

 able or useful guide to this form of experimental 



teaching could be desired than the admirable little 

 work before us. Not a superfluous phrase and 

 not an obscure phrase mars its pages. . . ." New 

 England Medical Gazette. 



"... No space is wasted, either bywords or 

 by illustrations, a fact which we believe greatly en- 

 hances its value for the earnest student." Pacific 

 Medical and Surgical Journal and Western Lan- 

 cet. 



"... All the ordinary operations practiced in 

 surgery are described in a concise and clear man- 

 ner, many of the later procedures finding a place 

 which are not incorporated in larger works on sur- 

 gery already before the public. The book will 

 prove to be a great convenience to the practitioner 

 in active work, as well as to the student in the dis- 

 secting-room." Weekly Medical Review. 



" This book contains a simple and clear state- 

 ment of the way in which a large number of opera- 

 tions are to be performed on the cadaver, and can 

 be recommended to the use of teachers and students 

 in this important part of 'a surgical education. ..." 

 Medical and Surgical Reporter. 



FUNCTIONAL NERVOUS DISEASES: THEIR CAUSES 

 AND THEIR TREATMENT. Memoir for the Concourse of 1881-1883, 

 Academic Royale de Medecine de Belgique. With a Supplement, on the 

 Anomalies of Refraction and Accommodation of the Eye, and of the Oc- 

 ular Muscles. By GEORGE T. STEVENS, M. D., Ph. D., Member of the 

 American Medical Association, of the American Ophthalmological Society, 

 etc. ; formerly Professor of Ophthalmology and Physiology in the Albany 

 Medical College. 



Small 8vo. 217 pp. With Six Photographic Plates and Twelve Illustrations. Cloth, $2.50. 



"A careful study of this work will undoubtedly 

 clear up many hitherto illy understood cases of 

 nervous troubles, and will lead to a more success- 

 ful treatment of such. . . . " Peoria Medical 

 Monthly. 



"... We heartily commend his book to all 

 thoughtful students of nervous diseases, feeling 

 sure that they can not fail of finding in it most 

 valuable suggestions." Medical and Surgical Re- 

 porter. 



". . . It is fortunate for the profession that 

 Dr. Stevens has done his views full justice in a 

 work to which all can have access, for they cer- 

 tainly deserve careful attention." Medical Press 

 of Western New York. 



"... The work is eminently suggestive and 

 practical upon numerous points, and must prove 

 interesting and very useful to the student and 

 practitioner." Southern Medical Record. 



"... To Dr. Stevens the profession is un- 

 questionably indebted for the discovery of a new 

 and important class of causative influences ; and no 

 physician, after a thoughtful reading of this ad- 

 mirable treatise, will fail to the diagnosis of an ex- 

 perienced oculist an invaluable aid to his own in 

 any obstinate case of nervous disease under his 

 care.' 1 New England Medical Gazette. 



" Dr. Stevens has written a suggestive little 

 book, and the mere fact that it has excited criticism 

 is pretty fair proof that there is good in it. For 

 our own part, we. confess that we have derived 

 much pleasure from its perusal. . . . Finally, the 

 book is written in a style which is decidedly fas- 

 cinating. Dr. Stevens knows much about English 

 prose, and he has a well-developed rhythm both in 

 ideas and words, and hence he renders the assimila- 

 tion of knowledge easy. His monograph should 

 be read by those who are interested in the prob- 

 lems of neuro-pathology." The New York Medi- 

 cal Journal. 



