

A IYTAGAI JJk '1CEJVT AMD CHEAP 



SMITH & HORNER'S ANATOMICAL ATLAS. 





Just Published, Price Five Dollars in Parts. 



r 



AN 



ANATOMICAL ATLAS 

 ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE STRUCTURE OF THE HUMAN BOUT. 







BY HENRY H. SMITH, M.D., 



Fellow of the College of Physicians, 4"C 



UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF 



WILLIAM E. HORNER, M.D., 



Professor of Anatomy in the University of Pennsylvania. 



In One lafrge Volume, Imperial Octavo. 



This wwk is but just completed, having been delayed over the time intended by the great difficulty in giving 

 to the illustrations the desired finish and perfection. It consists of five parts, whose contents are as follows: 



Part I. The Bones and Ligaments, with one hundred and thirty engravings. 

 Part II. The Muscular and Dermoid Systems, with ninety-one engravings. 



i akt v. me nervous system and the tenses, with one hundred and twenty-six engravings. 

 Forming altogether a complete System of Anatomical Plates, of nearly 



SIX HUNDRED AND FIFTY FIGURES, 



executed in the best style of art, and making one iarge imperial octavo volume. Those who do not want it in 

 parts can have the work bound in extra cloth or sheep at an extra cost. 



This work possesses novelty both in the design and the execution. It is the first attempt to apply engraving 

 on wood, on a large scale, to the illustration of human anatomy, and the beauty of the parts issued induces the 

 publishers to flatter themselves with the hope of the perfect success of their undertaking. The plan of the 

 work is at once novel and convenient Each page is perfect in itself, the references being immediately under 

 the figures, so that the eye takes in the whole at a glance, and obviates the necessity of continual reference 

 backwards and forwards. The cuts are selected from the best and most accurate sources ; and, where neces- 

 sary, original drawings have been made from the admirable Anatomical Collection of the University ofPenn 

 sylvania. It embraces all the late beautiful discoveries arising from the use of the microscope in the invesu- 

 gation of the minute structure of the tissues. 



In the getting up of this very complete work, the publishers have spared neither pains nor expense, and they 

 now present it to the protession, with the full confidence that it will be deemed all that is wanted in a scientific 

 and artistical noun oi view, while, at the game time, its very low price places it within the reach of all. 



It ts particularly adapted to supply the place of skeletons or subjects, as the profession wiil see by examining the It 

 of plates ' * * 



list 



These figures are well selected, and present a complete and accurate representation of that wonderful fabric, 

 the human body. The plan of this Atlas, which renders it so peculiarly convenient for the student, and its 

 superb artistical execution, have been aire ad v pointed out. We must congratulate the student upon the 

 completion of this atlas, as it is the most convenient work of the kind that has yet appeared; and, we must 

 add. the very beautiful manner in which it is ' got up 5 is so creditable to the country' as to be flattering to our 

 national pride."— .American Medical Journal. 



"This is an exquisite volume, and a beautiful specimen of art We have numerous Anatomical Atlases, 

 but we will venture to say that none equal it in cheapness, and none surpass it in faithfulness and spirit V « 

 strongly recommend to our friends, both urban and suburban, the purchase of this excellent work, tor winca 

 boiti i editor and publisher deserve the thanks of the profession."— Medical Examhur. . . , 



▼ e would strongly recommend it, not only to the student, but also to the working practitioner, wno, 

 although grown rusty in the toils of his harness still has the desire, and often the necessity, of refreshing his 

 knowledge m this fundamental part of the science of medicine."— New York Journal of Medicine and awrf. 



"2<"*» "i recaiang me aetans learned m the dissecung room, and which are soon torgotten.' 



" It is a beautiful as well as particularly useful design, which should be extensively patronized by physicians, 

 surgeons and medical students."— Boston Med. and Surg. Journal *, 1n 



•«* u ee , n lhc mm of lhe author of the Atlas to comprise in it the valuable points of all previous worics. .10 



be tissues, and by placing it at a morale 

 dissecting or operating room, or other new 



,;rp. "wtcwinuMrTiio vj luca. ana surgery. .-,. 



MrlLru?, numhers 'complete the series of this beautiful work, which fully merits the praise bestowed upon me 

 and cor dffi v "• We re i garU a11 Uie W*** « possessing an accuracy only equalled by *""*«*£* 

 lid sZXS? reCOramend lhe WOrk <° ail «HW* »» Hie «udy of anatomy.»-iVet* York Journal of Mediant 



his «udent» le ?r! WOr , k than the one before us con,d "Oi easily be placed by a physician upon the table of 



»• •"dent. —Western Journal of Mrdicine and Surgery > F 



^ e were much pleased with Part i. but the Second 



****, 



M*£cel Aum* T - ° l , " lUsc ^«'Hl. lastly, their separate delineations. ^^?T 12 W- 

 ""mblciu AUaa to oux readers in the very strongest itruL.-New York Journal of Median* and *"*• 



