22 D. APPLETON & 00/8 ILLUSTRATED 
GUTMANN. The Watering-Places and Mineral Springs of 
Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. With Notes on Climatic 
Resorts and Consumption, Sanitariums, Peat, Mud, and Sand Baths, Whey 
and Grape Cures, etc. By Epwarp Gurmann, M.D. With Illustrations, 
Comparative Tables, and a Colored Map, explaining the Situation and 
Chemical Composition of the Spas. 12mo. Cloth, $2.50. 
“Dr. Gutmann has ‘compiled an excellent cal compositions, with the therapeutical applica- 
medical guide, which gives full information on tions of the mineral waters, are very thoroughly 
the manners and.customs of living at all the presented in separate parts of the volume.”— 
principal watering-places in Europe. The chemi- New York Times. 
HAMMOND. Clinical Lectures on Diseases of the Nervous Sys- 
tem. Delivered at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. By Witt- 
1am A. Hammonp, M.D., Professor of Diseases of the Mind and Nervous 
System, ete. Edited, with Notes, by T. M. B. Cross, M. D., Assistant to 
the Chairs of Diseases of the Mind and Nervous System, etc. In one 
handsome volume of 300 pages. $3.50. 
These lectures have been reported in full, and, together with the histories of the cases, which were 
prepared by the editor after careful study and prolonged observation, constitute a clinical volume 
which, while it does not claim to be exhaustive, will nevertheless be found to contain many of the more 
important affections of the kind that are commonly met with in practice. 
‘As these lectures were intended especially for the benefit of students, the author has confined him- 
self’ to a full consideration of the symptoms, causes, and treatment of each affection, without attempting 
to enter into the pathology or morbid anatomy. 
HAMMOND. A Treatise on Insanity, in its Medical Relations. By 
Wituram A. Hammonp, M. D., Surgeon-General U.S. Army (retired list) ; 
Professor of Diseases of the Mind and Nervous System in the New York 
Post-Graduate Medical School ; President of the American Neurological 
Association, etc. 8vo. ‘767 pages. Cloth, $5.00; sheep, $6.00. 
In this work the author has not only considered the subject of Insanity, but has prefixed that division 
of his work with a general view of the mind and the several categories of mental faculties, and a full 
account of the various causes that exercise an influence over mental derangement, such as habit, age, sex, 
hereditary tendency, constitution, temperament, instinct, sleep, dreams, and many other factors. 
Insanity, it is believed, is in this volume brought before the reader in an original manner, and with 
a degree of thoroughness which can not but lead to important results in the study of’ psychological 
medicine. Those forms which have only been incidentally alluded to or entirely disr¢garded in the text- 
books hitherto published are here shown to be of the greatest interest to the general practitioner and 
student of mental science, both from a normal and abnormal stand-point. To a great extent the work 
relates to those species of mental derangement which are not seen within asylum walls, and which, 
therefore, are of special importance to the non-asylum physician. Moreover, it points out the symp- 
toms of Insanity in its first stages, during which there is most hope of successful medical treatment, 
and before the idea ot’ an asylum has occurred to the patient’s friends. 
“ We believe we may fairly say that the volume 
is a sound and practical treatise on the subject with 
which it deals ; contains a great deal of information 
carefully selected and put together in a pleasant 
and readable form; and, emanating, as it does, 
from an author whose previous works have met 
with a most favorable reception, will, we have little 
doubt, obtain a wide circulation.’—The Dublin 
Journal of Medical Science. 
“. . . The times are ripe for a new work on 
insanity, and Dr. Hammond’s great work will serve 
hereafter to mark an era in the history of American 
psychiatry. It should be in the hands of every 
physician who wishes to have an understanding of 
the present status of this advancing science. Who 
begins to read it will need no urging to continue ; 
he will be carried along irresistibly. We unhesi- 
tatingly pronounce it one of the best works on in- 
sanity which has yet appeared in the English 
language.””—Am. Journal of the Medical Sciences, 
“Dr. Hammond is a bold and strong writer, 
has given much study to his subject. and expresses 
himself so as to be understood by the reader, even 
if the latter does not coincide with him. We like 
the book very much, and consider it a valuable 
addition to the literature of insanity. We have no 
hesitancy in commending the book to the medical 
profession, as it is to them it is specially ad- 
dressed.””— Therapeutic Gazette. 
‘“t Dr, Hammond has added another great work 
to the long list of valuable publications which 
have placed him among the foremost neurologists 
and alienists of America; and we predict for this 
volume the happy fortune of its predecessors—a 
rapid toe through paying editions. We are 
sorry that our limits will not permit of an analysis 
of this work, the best text-book on insanity that 
has yet appeared.”’— The Polyclinic. 
‘< We are ready to welcome the present volume 
as the most lucid, comprehensive, and practical 
