28 
D. APPLETON & C028 ILLUSTRATED 
agement of an old case of stone, or enlarged pros- 
tate, or mat genito-urinary trouble, we can heartily 
recommend this edition of Keyes’s book.’’—Lrac- 
tice. 
“Professor Keyes has now become so well and 
favorably known in connection with genito-urinary 
surgery that any work bearing his name is suffi- 
ciently recommended, and we are sure this new re- 
vision of Van Buren and Keyes’s text-book is quite 
up to any work upon the same subject heretofore 
produced, We can recommend it highly because 
it is a complete treatise of the diseases of the genito- 
urinary system, including syphilis, and further, on 
account of the able and practical manner with 
which the subject is handled. Any one who will 
earefully read the pages of this work will find his 
time has been well spent.”—Canada Lancet. 
“The labors of Dr. Keyes are too well known 
to require further commendation. The last effort 
is eminently lucid and practical, and is deserving 
of general recognition. There are some things 
with which we might feel disposed to differ with 
the author—notably, treatment of syphilis and 
urethral stricture—but the general merit of the 
KEYES. 
The Tonic Treatment of Syphilis. 
production compels us to refrain from criticism. It 
ought to be in the hands of every Ni alert for it 
is interesting and instructive. The blishers 
have, as usual, issued it in good style.””— Medical 
and Surgical Synopsis. 
“Tt is safe to predict that no book of the year 
will meet with a more eager welcome than this re- 
vision by Dr. Keyes of' the classical work of which 
he was joint author. . . . He has virtually rewrit- 
ten the book which first gave him fame, bringing 
to the work the experience of added years of active 
labor, and the result is a treatise on the subject, of 
which it is not too high athe to say that it stands 
without a peer in the Eng ish language. It is valu- 
able alike to the surgeon and the physician, the 
oculist, the aurist, the gynecologist, the alienist, 
and the pocem practitioner, for, unhappily, the 
subject of which it treats exercises a defining influ- 
ence on a large proportion of the ills of humanity, 
From the fcetus in utero to the octogenarian ‘ the 
trail of the serpent is over them all,’ and every 
practitioner of medicine in every varying circum- . 
stance of practice may profit by Dr. Keyes’s labors.”” 
—FPittsburgh Medical Review, 
By E. L. Keyzs, » 
A. M., M. D., Adjunct Professor of Surgery and Professor of Dermatology 
in the Bellevue Hospital Medical College, ete. 
$1.00. 
8vo. 83 pages. Cloth, 
“ My studies in syphilitic blood have yielded results at once so gratifying to me, and so convincing 
as to the tonic influence of minute doses of mercury, that I feel impelled to lay this brief treatise before 
the medical public in support of a continuous treatment of syphilis by small (tonic) doses of mercury. 
I believe that a general trial of the method will, in the long run, vindicate its excellence.’ —Zxtract from 
Preface. 
KINGSLEY. A Treatise on Oral Deformities, as a Branch of — 
Mechanical Surgery. 
By Norman W. Kinestry, M.D.S8., D.D.S., 
President of the Board of Censors of the State of New York, late Dean 
of the New York College of Dentistry and Professor of Dental Art and 
Mechanism, etc., etc. 
sheep, $6.00. 
SPEOIMEN oF ILLUSTRATION. 
With over 350 Illustrations. 
8vo. Cloth, $5.00 ; 
“T have read with great pleasure and much 
Pe your valuable ‘ Treatise on Oral Deformities.’ 
he work contains much original matter of great 
practical value, and is full of useful information, 
which will be of great benefit to the profession.”— 
Lewis A. Sayre, M. D., LL. D., Professor of Or- 
thopedic ogy and Clinical Surgery, Bellevue 
Hospital Medical College. 
‘ A casual glance at this work might impress 
the reader with the idea that its contents were of 
more practical value to the dentist than to the gen- 
eral practitioner or surgeon. But it is by no means 
a mere work on dentistry, although a practical 
knowledge of the latter art seems to be essential to 
the carrying out of the author’s views regarding 
the correction of the different varieties of oral de- 
formities of which he treats. We would he doing 
injustice to the work did not we make particular 
reterence to the masterly chapter on the treatment 
of fractures of the lower jaw. The whole subject 
is so thoroughly studied that nothing is left to be 
desired by any surgeon who wishes to treat these 
fractures intelligently and successfully. The work, 
as a whole, bears marks of originality in every sec- . 
tion, and impresses the readcr with the painstaking 
efforts of the author to get at the truth, and apply 
it in an ingenious and practical way to the wants 
of the general practitioner, the surgeon, and the 
dentist.” —Medical Record. 
