D. APPLETON & 0028S ILLUSTRATED 
BILLROTH. General Surgical Pathology and Therapeutics, in 
Fifty-one Lectures. A Text-Book for Students and Physicians. By Dr. 
Tuxopor Brtirora, Professor of Surgery in Vienna. With Additions by 
Dr. Alexander von Winiwarter, Professor of Surgery in Liittich. Trans- 
lated from the fourth German edition with the special permission of the 
author, and revised from the tenth edition, by Charles E. Hackley, A.M., 
M. D., Physician to the New York and Trinity Hospitals ; Member of the 
New York County Medical Society, ete. 
sheep, $6.00. 
SPEcIMEN oF ILLUSTRATION. 
Tissue of a glio sarcoma after Virchow. Magnified 
850 diameters. 
BRAMWELL. 
Diseases of the Heart and Thoracic Aorta. 
8vo, 835 pages. Cloth, $5.00; 
“Since this translation was revised from 
the sixth German edition in 1874, two other 
editions have been published. The present 
revision is made to correspond to the eighth 
German edition. 
“Lister’s method of antiseptic treatment 
is referred to in various places, and other new 
points that have come up within a few years 
are discussed, 
“A chapter has been written on amputa- 
tion and resection. In all, there are seventy- 
Jour additional pages, with a number of 
woodcuts.”—Kxtract from Translator’s Pref- 
ace to the Revised Edition, 
“The want of a book in the English 
language, presnane in a concise form the 
views of the German pathologists, has lon 
been felt, and we venture to say no boo. 
could more perfectly supply that want than 
the present volume.””—The Lancet. 
By 
Byrom Bramwe t, M. D., F.R.C.P.E., Lecturer on the Principles and 
Practice of Medicine and on Medical Diagnosis in the Extra-Academical 
School of Medicine, Edinburgh; Pathologist to the Royal Infirmary, 
Edinburgh, ete. 
pages. 
“A careful gibi of this work will well repay 
the student and refresh the memory of the busy 
practitioner. It is the outcome of sound knowledge 
and solid work, and thus devoid of all ‘ ea 
which forms the bulk of many monographs on this 
and other subjects. The material is treated with 
due regard to its proportionate importance, and the 
author has well und wisely carne out his apparent 
intention of rather furnishing a groundwork of 
knowledge on which the reader must build for him- 
self by personal observation, than of making ex- 
eursions into-the region of dogma and of fancy by 
which his book might have secured a perhaps more 
rapid but certainly a more evanescent success than 
that which it will now undoubtedly and deserv- 
edly attain.”’”—Medical Tines and Gazette. 
“Tn this clegant and profusely illustrated vol- 
ume Dr, Bramwell has entered a field which has 
hitherto been so worthily cccupied by British 
authors—Hope, Hayden, Walshe, and others; and 
-the heart and_blood-vessels. 
Illustrated with 226 Wood Engravings and 68 Litho- 
graph Plates, showing 91 Figures—in all, 317 Illustrations. 
Cloth, $8.00; sheep, $9.00. 
8vo, 783 
we can not but admire the industry and care 
which he has bestowed upon the work. As it 
stands, it may fairly be taken as representing 
the stand-point at which we have arrived in 
cardiac physiology and pathology; for the book 
opens with an extended account of physiologi- 
cal. facts, and especially the advances made of 
late years in the neuro-muscular mechanism ot 
Although in this 
respect physiological: research has outstripped 
clinical and pathological observation, Dr. Bram- 
well has, we think, done wisely in so intro- 
ducing his treatise, and has thereby greatly 
added to its value. A chapter upon thoracic 
aneurism terminates a work which, from the sci- 
entific manner in which the subject is treated. 
from the care and discrimination exhibited, anc 
the copious elaborate illustrations with which it 
is adorned, is one which will advance the author’s 
reputation as a most industrious and painstaking 
clinical observer.’’—Lancet. 
