A Selection from Charles Griffin and Company's Catalogue. 



By PROFESSOR T. M'CALL ANDERSON, M.D. 



Now ready, with two Coloured Lithographs, Steel Plate, and numerous Woodcids. 

 Royal 8vo, Handsome Cloth, 25s. 



DISEASES OF THE SKIN 



(A TREATISE ON), 



With Special Reference to Diagnosis and Treatment, including an 

 Analysis of 11,000 Consecutive Cases. 



By T. M'CALL ANDERSON, M.D., 



Professor of Clinical Medicine, University of Glasgow. 



The want of a manual embodying the most recent advances in the 

 treatment of cutaneous affections has made itself much felt of late years. 

 Professor M'Call Anderson's Treatise, therefore, affording, as it does, a 

 complete re'sumS of the best modern practice, will be doubly welcome. It 

 is written not from the standpoint of the University Professor but from 

 that of one who, during upwards of a quarter of a century, has been actively 

 engaged both in private and in hospital practice, with unusual opportunities 

 for studying this class of disease, hence the practical and clinical direc- 

 tions given are of great value. 



Speaking of the practical aspects of Dr Anderson's work, the British 

 Medical Journal says : " Skin diseases are, as is well known, obstinate and 

 troublesome, and the knowledge that there are additional resources 

 besides those in ordinary use will give confidence to many a puzzled 

 medical man, and enable him to encourage a doubting patient. Almost 



ANY PAGE MIGHT BE USED TO ILLUSTRATE THE FULNESS OF THE WORK IN 



THIS RESPECT. . . . The chapter on Eczema, that universal and most 

 troublesome ailment, describes in a comprehensive spirit, and with the 

 greatest accuracy of detail, the various methods of treatment. Dr Anderson 

 writes with the authority of a man who has tried the remedies which he 

 discusses, and the information and advice which he gives cannot fail to 

 prove extremely valuable." 



Opinions of the Press. 



"Beyond doubt, the MOST important work on Skin Diseases that has appeared in England for many 

 years. . . . Conspicuous for the amount and excellence of the clinical and practical information 

 which it contains." British Medical Journal. 



"Professor M'Call Anderson has produced a work likely to prove very acceptable to the busy practitioner. 

 The sections on treatment are very full. For example, Eczema has 110 pages given to it, and 73 of these 

 pages are devoted to treatment." Lancet. 



CHARLES GRIFFIN & CO., Exeter Street, Strand, London. 



