SAUNDERS' BOOKS ON 



Hill and Gerstley's Infant Feeding 



Clinical Lectures in Infant Feeding. By Lewis Webb Hill, 

 M. D., Alumni Assistant in Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, and 

 Jesse R. Gerstley, M. D., Instructor in Pediatrics, Northwestern 

 University Medical School. i2mo of 377 pages, illustrated. Cloth, 



$2.75 net. PubUshed October, 1917 



In these clinics you are given the full details of the Boston method of infant 

 feeding as developed by Dr. Rotch, and of the Chicago method. You are given the 

 theory, use in both normal and abnormal cases, exact quantities and percentages, 

 and concrete clinical examples. The book is equivalent to a postgraduate course 

 in infant feeding. It brings these two systems right to your door. 



Abt's Preparation of Infants* Foods 



The Preparation oe Infants' Foods. By Isaac A. Abt, M. D., 

 Professor of Diseases of Children, Northwestern University Medical 

 School. i2nio of 143 pages. Cloth, $1.25 net. PubUshed July, 1917 



This is a practical guide for infant feeding, giving to young mothers, nurses, and 

 caretakers minute directions on the preparation of food for infants and young 

 children. You get weights and measures; the mineral constituents and caloric 

 values of foods. You get such practical material as diet-lists for constipation in 

 older children, an outline of a plan for feeding babies, care of nipples and bottles, 

 etc., and a great host of recipes for beverages of all kinds, milk preparations, soups 

 and broths, puddings and cereal preparations, custards, eggs, vegetables, fruits, 

 meats, sea foods, and breads. 



Aikens* Home Nurse's Hand-Book vu^^^JiT^^'^^ 



Home Nurse's Hand-Book. By Charlotte A. Aikens. izmo of 

 303 pages, illustrated. Cloth, $1 .50 net. 



The point about this work is this : It tells you and shows you just how to do those 

 little but important things often omitted from other nursing books. "Home Treat- 

 ments" and "Points to be Remembered" — terse, crisp reminders — stand out as par- 

 ticularly practical. Just the book for those who have the home-care of the sick. 



Galbraith's Personal Hygiene for Women ^^l^^ 



Personal Hygiene and Physical Training for Women. By 

 Anna M. Galbraith, M. D. i2mo of 393 pages, with original illus- 

 trations. Cloth, $2.25 net. PubUshed January, 1917 



" It contains just the sort of information which is very greatly needed by the weaker 

 sex. Its illustrations are excellent." — Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette. 



Galbraith's Four Epochs of Woman's Life "^^l^il 



The Four Epochs or Woman's Life. By Anna M. Galbraith, 

 M.D. With an Introductory Note by John H. Musser, M.D., Uni- 

 versity of Pennsylvania. 1 2mo of 296 pages. Cloth, $1.50 net. 



" We do not as a rule care for medical books written for the instruction of the public; 

 but we must admit that the advice in Dr. Galbraith's work b, in the main, wise and whole- 

 some." — Birmingham Medical Review. Published March, 1917 



