LEGAL MEDICINE 



Bohm and Painter's Massage 



Massage. By Max Bohm, M. D., of Berlin, Gennany. Edited, with an 

 Introduction, by Charles F. Painter, M, D., Professor of Orthopedic Sur- 

 gery at Tufts College Medical School, Boston. Octavo of 91 pages, with 97 

 ^(jrfzVa/ illustrations. Published June, 1913 Cloth, Ji.ysnet. 



Golebiewski and Bailey's Accident Diseases 



Atlas and Epitome of Diseases Caused by Accidents. By Dr. Ed. 



GOLEBIEWSKI, of Berlin. Edited, with additions, by Pearce Bailey, M. D., 

 Consulting Neurologist to St. Luke's Hospital, New York. With 71 colored 

 illustrations on 40 plates, 143 text illustrations, and 549 pages of text. Cloth, 

 $4.00 net. In Saunders' Hand-Atlas Series. Published 1901 



Hofmann and Peterson's Leg^al Medicine HandXia^s 



Atlas of Legal Medicine. By Dr. E. von Hofmann, of Vienna. 

 Edited by Frederick Peterson, M. D., Professor of Psychiatry in the 

 College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York. With 120 colored figures 

 and 193 half-tone illustrations. Cloth, ^(3. 50 net. Published April, 1898 



Jakob and Fisher's Nervous System saunden* 



" Atlases 



Atlas and Epitome of tfie Nervous System and its Diseases. By 



Professor Dr. Chr. Jakob, of Erlangen. Edited, with additions, by Ed- 

 ward D. Fisher, M. D., University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College. 

 With 83 plates and copious text. Cloth, 5^3.50 net. Published i90i 



Spear's Nervous Diseases pubushed November, 1916 



A Manual of Nervous Diseases. By Irving J. Spear, M. D,. Professor 

 of Neurology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. i2mo of 660 pagesi 

 illustrated. Cloth, ^3.00 net. 



This is a comprehensive digest, supplying the means to a clear understanding of 

 neurology, and robbing that subject of much of its difficulty. You are given, first, 

 a brief description of the practical anatomy and physiology, with those facts and 

 theories that bear on the mechanism of organic nervous diseases. Then pathology 

 is given, the simpler diseases being considered first, gradually preparing the reader 

 to grasp the more difficult ones. The descriptions are clear and brief, dijferential 

 diagnoses and treatments being brought out very definitely. Only the most recent 

 accepted facts have been considered. For the treatments recommended, no special 

 apparatus is required beyond a galvanic and faradic battery; they demand no 

 special training, and they are easily remembered. 



