14 Lka Beothkes & C!o., Philadelphia and New York. 



HAB.XSHOBNE (HENRV). ESSENTIALS OF THE PRINCIPLES 

 AND PEACTICE OF MEDICINE. Fifth edition. In one 12mo. 

 volume, 669 pages, with 144 engravings. Cloth, $2.75 ; half bound, $3. 



A HANDBOOK OF ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY. In one 



12mo. volume of 310 pages, with 220 engravings. Cloth, $1.75. 



A CONSPECTUS OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES. Comprising 



Manuals of Anatomy, Physiology, Chemistry, Materia Medica, Prac- 

 tice of Medicine, Surgery and Obstetrics. Second edition. In one royal 

 12mo. vol. of 1028 pages, with 477 iUus. Cloth, $4.25 ; leather, $5. 



HAYDEN (JAIUBS B.). A MANUAL OF VENEREAL DISEASES. 

 In one 12mo. volume of 263 pages, with 47 engravings. Cloth, $1.50. 



It is practical, concise, definite 

 and of suifieient fulness to be satis- 

 factory. — Chicago Clinical Review. 



This work gives all of the prac- 

 tically essential information about 

 tlie three venereal diseases, gon- 

 orrhoea, the chancroid and syphilis. 

 In diagnosis and treatment it is par- 



ticularly thorough, and may be 

 relied upon as a guide in the man- 

 agement of this class of diseases. — 

 Northwestern Lancet. 



It is well written, up to date, and 

 will be found very useful. — Inter- 

 national Medical Magazine. 



HAYBM (GEORGES) AND HARE (H. A.). PHYSICAL AND 

 NATURAL THERAPEUTICS. The Remedial Use of Heat, Elec- 

 tricity, Modifications of Atmospheric Pressure, Climates and Mineral 

 Waters. Edited by Prof. H. A. Hake, M. D. In one octavo volume 

 of 414 pages,with 113 engravings. Cloth, $3. 



This well-timed up-to-date volume 

 is particularly adapted to the re- 

 q^uirements of the general practi- 

 tioner. The section on mineral 

 waters is most scientific and prac- 

 tical. Some 200 pages are given up 

 to electricity and evidently embody 

 the latest scientific information on 

 the subject. Altogether this work 

 is the clearest and most practical aid 

 to the study of nature's therapeutics 

 that has yet come under our obser- 

 vation. — The Medical Fortnightly. 



For many diseases the most potent 

 remedies lie outside of the materia 

 medica, a fact yearly receiving wider 



recognition. Within this large 

 range of applicability, physical 

 agencies when compared with drugs 

 are more direct and simple in their 

 results. Medical literature has long 

 been rich in treatises upon medical 

 agents, but an authoritative work 

 upon the other great branch of 

 therapeutics has until now been a 

 desiiieratum. The section on climate, 

 rewritten by Prof. Hare, will, for 

 the first time, place the abundant 

 resources of our country at the in- 

 telligent command of American 

 practitioners. — The Kansas City 

 Medical Index. 



HERMAN (G. ERNEST). FIRST LINES IN MIDWIFERY. In 

 one 12mo. vol. of 198 pages, with 80 engravings. Cloth, $1.25. See 

 Student's Series of Manuals, page 27. 



HERMANN (Ij.). EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY. A Hand- 

 book of the Methods for Determining the Physiological Actions of 

 Drugs. Translated by Robert Meade Smith, M. D. In one 12mo. 

 volume of 199 pages, with 32 engravings. Cloth, $1.50. 



