SURGER Y AND ANA TOMY 1 1 



Fenger Memorial Volumes 



Fenger Memorial Volumes. Edited by Ludvig Hektoen, M. D., 

 Professor of Pathology, Rush Medical College, Chicago. Two octavos 

 of 525 pages each. Per set : Cloth, 1 15.00 nfet ; Half Morocco, ;gi 8.00 net. 



LIMITED EDITION 



These handsome volumes consist of all the important papers written by the late 

 Christian Fenger, for many years professor of surgery at Rush Medical College, 

 Chicago. Not only the papers published in English are included, but also those 

 which originally appeared in Danish, German, and French. 



The name of Christian Fenger typifies thoroughness, extreme care, deep re- 

 search, and sound judgment. His contributions to the advancement of the world's 

 surgical knowledge are indeed as valuable and interesting reading to-day as at 

 the time of their original publication. They are pregnant with suggestions. 

 Fenger' s literary prolificacy may be judged from this memorial volume — over 

 1000 pages. 



Sobotta and McMurrich's 

 Human Anatomy 



Atlas and Text-Book of Human Anatomy. In Three Volumes. By 

 J. Sobotta, M.D., of Wiirzburg. Edited, with additions, by J. Playfair 

 McMuRRicH, A. M., Ph. D., Professor of Anatomy, University of 

 Toronto, Canada. Three large quartos, each containing about 250 

 pages of text and over 300 illustrations, mostly in colors. Per volume : 

 Cloth, ;^6.oo net; Half Morocco, 1^7.50 net. 

 Edwiurd Martin. M.D., Professor of Clinical Surgery, University of Pennsylvania 



" This Is a piece of bookmaking which is truly admirable, with plates and text so well 

 chosen and so clear that the work is most useful to the practising surgeon." 



Campbell's Surgical Anatomy 



A Text-Book of Surgical Anatomy. By William Francis Camp- 

 bell, M. D., Professor of Anatomy, Long Island College Hospital. 

 Octavo of 675 pages, with 319 original illustrations. Cloth, ^5.00 net. 



SECOND EDITION 



This is in the fullest sense an applied anatomy— an anatomy that will be of 

 inestimable value to the surgeon because only those facts are discussed and only 

 those structures and regions emphasized that have a peculiar interest to him. 



Boston Medical and Surgical Journal . ■ -.^ ,^ , ^ 



■■The author has an excellent command of his subject, and treats it with the freedom and 

 the coi^viction of the experienced anatomist. He is also an admirable chnic.an. 



