Saunders' College Text-Books 



Normal Histology and Organography. By Charles Hill, M. D, 

 I2II10 of 468 pages, 337 illustrations. Flexible leather, ;j!2.oo net. 



Second Editioit, 



Dr. Hill's work is characterized by a brevity of style, yet a complete- 

 ness of discussion, rarely met in a book of this size. The entire field 

 is covered, beginning with the preparation of material, the cell, the 

 various tissues, on through the different organs and regions, and end- 

 ing with fixing and staining solutions. 



Dr. E. P. Porterfield, St. Louis University: " I am very much gratified 

 to find so handy a work. It is so full and complete that it meets all 

 requirements." 



IBdlkmi, Oai¥ndl©fiFs, IHi'^lb®ir''i IH[i§ft®l®gy 



Histology. By A. A. B5hm, M. D., and M. von Davidoff, 

 M. D., of Munich. Edited by G. Carl Huber, M. D., Professor 

 of Embryology at the Wistar Institute, University of Pennsyl- 

 vania. Octavoof 528 pages, 377 illustrations. Flexible cloth, $3.50 

 net. Second Edition. 



This work is conceded to be the most complete text-book on human 

 histology published. Particularly full on microscopic technic and 

 staining, it is especially serviceable in the laboratory. Every step in 

 technic is clearly and precisely detailed. It is a work you can depend 

 upon always. 



New York Medical Journal: "There can be nothing but praise for 

 this model text-book and laboratory guide." 



HdisldF^s Emfeiry®l®gj 



Embryology. By J. C. Heisler, M. D., Professor of Anatomy, 

 INIedico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. Octavo of 432 pages, 

 205 illustrations. Cloth, $^ 00 net. Third Edition. 



A book of the greatest teaching value. The subject is taken up sys- 

 tematically, treating the development of each tissue, each organ, each 

 region and system in a most thorough way. There are frequent allu- 

 sions to certain facts of comparative embryology. 

 Journal American Medical Association : " The text is concise, and 

 yet sufficiently full for a text-book." 



