18 
D. APPLETON & OOJ8S ILLUSTKAL LD 
FOURNIER. Syphilis and Marriage. 
By Atrrep Fournier, Professeur & la Faculté de 
Louis Hospital, Paris. 
Médecine de Paris ; Médecin de |’Hépital Saint-Louis. 
Lectures delivered at the St. 
Translated by P. 
Albert Morrow, M.D., Physician to the Skin and Venereal Department, 
New York Dispensary, etc., etc. 8vo. Cloth, $2.00; sheep, $3.00. 
“ The book supplies a want long recognized in 
medical literature, and is based upon a very ex- 
tended experience in the ynere hospitals.for sy ph- 
ilis of Paris, which have furnished the author with 
arich and rare store of clinical cases, utilized by 
him with great discrimination, originality, and 
clinical judgment. It exhibits a prufound knowl- 
edge of its subject under all relations, united with 
marked skill and tact in treating the delicate social 
questions necessarily involved in such a line of’ in- 
vestigation. The entire volume is full of’ infor- 
mation, mnemonically condensed into axiomatic 
‘points.’ It isa book to buy, to keep, to read, to 
profit by, and to lend to others.’’—Boston Medical 
and Surgical Journal. 
“This work of the able and distinguished 
French syphilographer, Professor Fournier, is with- 
out doubt one of the most remarkable and impor- 
tant productions of the day. Possessing profound 
- knowledge of syphilis in all its protean forms, an 
unexcelled experience, a dramatic force of’ expres- 
sion, untinged, however, by even a suspicion of 
exaggeration, and a rare tact in dealing with the 
most delicate problems, he has given to the world 
aseries of lectures which, by their fascination of 
style, compels attention, and by their profundity 
of wisdom carries eonviction.’”’—St. Louis Courier 
of Medicine and Collateral Sciences. 
“Written with a perfect fairness, with a supe- 
rior ability, and in a style which, without aiming at 
effect, engages, interests, persuades, this work is 
one of those which ought to be immediately placed 
in the hands of every physician who desires not 
only to cure his patients, but to understand and ful- 
fill his duty as an honest man.””—Lyon Médicale, 
“No physician, who pretends to keep himself 
informed upon the grave social questions to which 
this disease imparts an absorbing interest, can af- 
ford to leave this valuable work unread.”—¥¢. 
Louis Clinical Record. 
‘The author handles this grave social problem 
without stint. A general perusal of this work 
would be of untold benefit to society.”’— Louisville 
Medical News. 
“Every page is full of the most practical and 
plain advice, couched in vigorous, emphatic lan- 
guage.”’—Detroit Lancet. ; 
“ The subject here presented is one of the most 
important that can engage the attention of the pro- 
fession. The volume should be generally read, as 
the subject-matter is of great importance to so- 
ciety.’—Maryland Medicat Journal. 
FREY. The Histology and Histo-Chemistry of Man. A Prac- 
tical Treatise on the Elements of Composition and Structure of the Hu- 
man Body. By Hetnricu Frey, Professor of Medicine in Zurich. Trans- - 
lated from the fourth German edition, by Arthur E. J. Barker, Surgeon to 
the City of Dublin Hospital; Demonstrator of Anatomy, Royal College 
of Surgeons, Ireland ; and revised by the Author. With 680 Engravings. 
8vo. 683 pages. 
Cloth, $5.00 ; sheep, $6.00. 
CONTENTS.—The Elements of Composition and of Structure of the Body: Elements of Compo-. 
sition—Albuminous or Protein Compounds, Hemoglobulin, Histogenic Derivatives of the Albuminous 
Substances or Albuminoids, the Fatty Acids and Fats, the Carbo-hydrates, Non-Nitrogenous Acids, 
Nitrogenous Acids, Amides, Amido-Acids, and Organic Bases, Animal Coloring Matters, Cyanogen 
Compounds, Mineral Constituents ; Elements of Structure—the Cell, the Origin of the Remaining Ele- 
ments of Tissue; the Tissues of the Body—Tissnes composed of Simple Cells, with Fluid Intermediate 
Substance, Tissues composed of Simple Cells, with a small amount of Solid Intermediate Substance, 
Tissues belonging to the Connective Substance Group, Tissues composed of Transformed and, as a rule, 
Cohering Cells, with Homogencous, Scanty, and more or Jess Solid Intermediate Substance ; Composite 
Tissues: The Organs of the Body—Organs of the Vegetative Type, Organs of the Animal Group. 
FRIEDLAENDER. The Use of the Microscope in Clinical and 
Pathological Examinations. By Dr. Cart FrrepLarnpeEr, Privat- 
Docent in Pathological Anatomy in Berlin. Translated from the enlarged 
and improved second edition, by Henry C. Coe, M. D., ete. With a Chro- 
mo-Lithograph. 12mo. 195 pages. With copious Index. Cloth, $1.00. 
book in his possession. ... The translator has 
done his work well, and has certainly conferred a 
great favor on all microscopists by placing within 
the reach of every one the work of so eccomplishe 
a teacher as Dr. Carl Friedlaender.”—Canada 
Medical and Surgical Journal. 
‘We are very much pleased to see Dr. Fried- 
laender’s little book make its appearance in English 
dress. As we have a practical acquaintance of the 
German edition since its appearance, we can speak 
of it in terms of unqualified praise. . . . Every one 
doing pathological work should have this little 
