CATALOGUE OF MEDICAL WORKS. 
19 
“Much good has been done in placing this little 
work in the hands of the profession. The technique 
of preparing, cutting, and staining specimens is 
iven at some length; also rules for the examina- 
tion of the various bodily fluids in both health and 
disease. The use of the microscope with high pow- 
ers, immersion lenses, and other accessories, is ex- 
plained very clearly. It isa very readable volume, 
even for those not engaged in actual laboratory 
work. A chromo-lithograph shows the various 
forms of disease-germs which have been definitely 
isolated.’’—Medical Record. 
“ Microscopical technique has improved'so much 
of late, especially in the direction of studying 
parasites, that amateurs must keep constantly on 
the lookout for all that is new, or they will find 
their work of little avail. The book before us is 
designed for just such workers ; it is small, simple, 
compact, but contains all that one needs to know.’ 
—Columbus Medical Journal. 
“This is one of the best books of the kind. 
Its descriptions are short, detailed, and accurate. 
It is devoted wholly to descriptions of the methods 
best adapted to use for making microscopical ex- 
aminations for clinical purposes. By those inter- 
GAMGEE. Yellow Fever a Nautical Disease. 
8vo. 
Prevention. By Joun GamGEE. 
“The author discusses, with a vast array of 
clear and well-digested facts, the nature and pre- 
vention of yellow fever. The work is admirably 
written, and the author’s theories plausible and 
well sustained by logical deductions from estab- 
lished facts.”"—Homaopathie Times. 
GARMANY. Operative Surgery on the Cadaver. 
ested in this subject, and especially by the begip- 
ner, will this little book be found valuavle,”’— 
Journal of the American Medical Association. 
‘« This is the very hook on microscopy that the 
general run of practitioners have long been want- 
Ing. Many doctors recognize their ignorance on 
the subject who, while neither expecting nor caring 
to become expert microscopists, do want to know, 
in plain language that is easily intelligible, how 
normal structures and abnormal tissues look under 
the microscope. This book is a great help to such 
a day eee and will do much to popularize the 
su ject of meraseo Dy in t pestions of diagnosis, 
ete.”’— Virginia Medical Monthly. 
‘We are glad to see that a good translation of 
this valuable little book has been made. The 
author is well known for his original work, and we 
ean feel assured that what he writes must have 
come from practical experience in the laboratory 
and is not simply a product of the ‘library table.’ 
. . . It is not intended as a treatise in pathological 
histology, but rather as a practical guide, and as 
such we can most heartily recommend it.””— Boston 
Medical and Surgical Journal. 
Its Origin and 
Cloth, $1.50. 
‘The theory is certainly shown to bea plausible 
one; and every reader, whether he be convinced 
or not, can not but be interested, instructed, and 
set to thinking.”—Lancet and Clinic, 
207 pages. 
By JasPEr 
Jewett Garmany, A. M., M.D., F. R.C.8., Attending Surgeon to Out- 
door Poor Dispensary of Bellevue Hospital; Visiting Surgeon to Ninety- 
ninth Street Reception Hospital ; 
150 pages. 
ciation, etc. Small 8vo. 
Member of the British Medical Asso- 
With Two Colored Diagrams 
showing the Collateral Circulation after Ligatures of Arteries of Arm, 
Abdomen, and Lower Extremity. 
“To the more advanced student who has the 
opportunity of operating on the cadaver, this work 
will be of great value, since it reduces to a system 
the procedure of ordinary surgical operations. To 
the practitioner it will be valuable as a work of 
easy reference as to the best methods of operation. 
In fact, it should have been named a manual of 
surgical operations. The instructions given are 
full, yet very plain and concise, and we predict for 
it a wide circulation.’ —Peoria Medical Monthly. 
‘‘, . . In its necessarily limited scope it is 
above criticism. . . . Indeed, there is nothing 
superfluous in the book, and the busy practitioner, 
who must do more or less surgery, would find it a 
very useful manual for frequent reference. ’’—Medi- 
cal Press of Western New York. 
“|. For the student in the dead-room, or 
the busy operating surgeon, this book is one of 
the most reliable and handy works we have ever 
seen.””—Southern Clinic. 
“ Post-mortem surgery mus‘ always precede in- 
telligent and successful surgery. No more accept- 
able or useful guide to this form of experimental 
teaching could be desired than the admirable little 
work before us. Not a superfluous phrase and not 
Cloth, $2.00. 
an obscure pe mars its pages... 
England Medical Gazette. 
“. . . No space is wasted, cither by words or 
by illustrations, a fact which we believe greatly 
enhances its value for the earnest student.’’— 
ve Medical and Surgical Journal and Western 
ance. 
“|. . All the ordinary operations practiced in 
surgery are described in a concise and clear man- 
ner, many of the later procedures finding a place 
which are not incorporated in larger works on 
surgery already before the public. The book will 
rove to be a yreat convenience to the practitioner 
in active work, as well as to the student in the dis- 
secting-room.”’— Weekly Medical Review. 
.— New 
‘This book contains a simple and clear state- 
ment of the way in which a large number of opera- 
tions arc to be performed on the cadaver, and can 
be recommended to the use of teachers and students 
in this important part of a surgical education. . . .”” 
—NMedical and Surgical Reporter. 
‘Tt is well titted to be a text-book for classes 
on operative surgery. . . . As a manual it is ex- 
cellent.’—Philadelphia Medical Times. 
. 
