CATALOGUE OF MEDIOAL WORKS. 
25 
HOWE. Emergencies, and How to treat Them. The Etiology, 
Pathology, and Treatment of Accidents, Diseases, and Cases of Poison- 
ing, which demand Prompt Action. 
By Joszrra W. Hows, M.D., Clinical Professor of 
tioners of Medicine. 
Designed for Students and Practi- 
Surgery in the Medical Department of the University of New York, etc., 
ete. 
‘* To the general practitioner in towns, villages, 
and in the country, where the aid and moral sup- 
port of a consultation can not be availed of, this 
volume will be recognized as a valuable help. We 
commend it to the profession.”’— Cincinnati Lan- 
cet and Observer. 
‘* The author wastes no words, but devotes him- 
self to the description of cach disease as if the pa- 
tient were under his hands. Because it is a gool 
HOWE. The Breath, and the 
Fourth edition, revised. 8vo. 
265 pages. Cloth, $2.50. 
book we recommend it most heartily to the profes- 
sion.”’— Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 
‘This work bears evidence of a thorough prac- 
tical acquaintance with the different branches of 
the profession. The author seems to possess a 
peculiar aptitude for imparting instruction as well 
as for simplifying tedious details, A careful peru- 
sal will amply repay the student and practitioner.” 
—New Yor Vedioul Journal. 
Diseases which give it a Fetid 
Odor. With Directions for Treatment. By Jossrpn W. Hows, M.D., 
Clinical Professor of Surgery in the Medical Department of the Univer- 
sity of New York, etc. Second edition, revised and corrected. 12mo. 
108 pages. Cloth, $1.00. 
“ This little volume well deserves the attention 
of physicians, to whom we commend it most 
highiy”— Chdcago Medical Journal. 
“To any one suffering from the affection, 
either in his own person or in that of his intimate 
acquaintances, we can commend this volume as 
containing alf that is known coneerning the sub- 
ject, set forth in a pleasant style.”—Philadelphia 
Uileni fanan . 
“ The author gives a succinct account of the dis- 
eased conditions in which a fetid breath is an im- 
qohent symptom, with his method of treatment. 
e consider the work a real addition to medical 
literature.”’— Cincinnati Medical Journal. 
HUEPPE. The Methods of Bacteriological Investigation. By 
Ferpinanp Hurrrx, Docent in Hygiene and Bacteriology in the Chemical 
Laboratory of R. Fresenius, at Wiesbaden. 
Dr. Rosert Kovn. 
Written at the request of 
Translated by Hermann M. Biaes, M. D., Instructor 
in the Carnegie Laboratory, and Assistant to the Chair of Pathological 
Anatomy in Bellevue Hospital Medical College. 
31 Illustrations. Cloth, $2.50. 
“This is the best book so far available in Eng- 
lish, being better adapted to the general student 
who undertakes the study trom first principles.’’— 
North Carolina Medical Journal, 
* All students of bacteriology will at once place 
this volume on their tables as indispensable for their 
most accurate and rapid study.” —Americin Lancet. 
* The work is written by one who thoroughly 
understands his subject and puts it clearly before 
the student.” —Pucijic Medical and Surgical Jour- 
nal and Western Lancet. 
“(He has sifted the whole of the scattered and 
sometimes almost inaccessible literature of the sub- 
ject, and has furnished the independ nt investi- 
gator a most valuable book, useful alike to the 
practitioner and to the student, as a trustworthy in- 
troduction into this territory.’’— College and Olint- 
cal [ecord. 
“To those who wish to have more than a mere 
theoretical knowledge of the subject the manual 
will be found indispensable.’’— Medical Record. 
“ As a whole, the book, written at Professor 
Koch’s request, reflects credit on the master’s 
8vo. 218 pages. With 
choice of author, and is one which no student of 
pathology can afford to be without. The transla- 
tion seems to have been most acceptably made,””— 
Medical Press of Western New York. 
“Of the many works that have recently ap- 
peared on the subject of bacterial technology, this 
one ccrtainly meets the requirements of a practical 
guide and book of reference; . . . the merits of the 
work are decided and should secure for it the repu- 
tation it deserves.”— Atlanta Medical and Surgi- 
cal Journal. 
“The book treats the subject in an exceedingly 
clear and comprehensive manner, and leaves little 
to be desired by the beginner, and is a complete 
guide to those wishing to work out any of the in- 
numerable problems connected with the life-history 
of the bacteria. . . . The translation seems to be 
well done.’—American Journal of the Medical 
Sctences. 
“ The importance of this subject in the scientific 
world . . . should insure for so practical a presen- 
tation of it as is found in the present volume a wide 
popularity.”’—New England Medical Gazette. 
