30 D. APPLETON & COVS ILLUSTRATED 
LETTERMAN. Medical Recollections of the Army of the 
Potomac. By Jonatuan Letrermay, M. D., late Surgeon U.S. A., and 
Medical Director of the Army of the Potomac. 8vo. 194 pages, 
Cloth, $1.00. 
_‘ We venture to assert that but few who open this volume of medical annals, pregnant as they are . 
with instruction, will care to do otherwise than finish them at a sitting.’ —Medicat Record. 
LITTLE. Medical and Surgical Aspects of In-Knee (Genu-Val- 
gum): Its Relation to Rickets ; its Prevention ; and its Treatment, with 
or without Surgical Operation. By W. J. Lirrrz, M. D., F. B.C. P., late 
Senior Physician to and Lecturer on Medicine at the London Hospital ; 
Visiting Physician to the Infant Orphan Asylum at Wanstead ; the Earls- 
wood Asylum for Idiots ; Founder of the Royal Orthopedic Hospital, ete. 
Assisted by E. Murrneap Littiz, M.R.C.S8. With complete Index, 
and illustrated by upward of 50 Figures and Diagrams. 8vo. 161 pages. 
Cloth, $2.00. 
LORING. A Text-Book of Ophthalmoscopy. By Epwarp G. Lor- 
inc, M.D. Parr 1I.—The Normal Eye, Determination of Refraction, and 
Diseases of the Media, With 131 Illustrations, and Four Chromo-Litho- 
graph Plates, containing 14 Figures. 8vo. 267 pages. Cloth, $5.00. 
SPECIMEN OF ILLUSTRATION. 
“This fine and scholarly work, 
if one may justly estimate it from 
this, its first part, is destined to be- 
come a classic in its branch of 
medical literature, being almost a 
Ftd ae aes in its treatment of its 
theme.” —Aew England Medical 
Gazette. 
“ Dy. E. G. Loring has written 
a very valuable book, and one 
which every: physician who uses, 
or wishes to use, the ophthalmo- 
scope should possess. . . . The 
book had a master of its scientific 
principles for its author, and a 
master of the book-maker’s art for 
its publisher. So far as we know, 
it has, in this branch of ophthal- 
mic-science, no equal in the Eng- 
lish language.”?— North Carolina 
Medical Journal. 
“ Although American ophthal- 
_ mologists have done much good 
| work, and as expert operators are 
| excelled by none, we have no work 
which can take rank as a text-book 
| with many English, German, and 
| French books. Itstakes but a 
| brief examination of this work 
* to demonstrate its superiority to 
“ The ‘ Text-book of Ophthalmoscopy,’ by Ed- 
ward G. Loring, M. D., is a splendid work. .. . I 
am well pleased with it, and am satisfied that it 
will be of service ‘both to the teacher and pupil. 
. . . Inthis book Dr. Loring has given us a sub- 
stantial exposition of Nature’s deeds and misdeeds 
as they are found written in the eye, and the key 
by means of which they can be comprehended.””— 
_R. Amor, A. M., M. D., Professor of Ophthal- 
mology and Otology, Cincinnati College g 
cine and Surgery. 
Nedi- 
many of the so-called text- books on ophthal- 
moscopy which have appeared during the past 
few years. The chapter devoted to directions 
for using the ophthalmoscope can not be excelled, 
and every student should be as familiar with it as 
with Gray’s anatomy. The chapter devoted to 
the fundus of the eye is unusually full, and the 
portion devoted to ‘anomalies’ can not fail to be 
of interest even to the specialist. The tog 
are very good, many of them new to opht almic 
text-books.”— Cleveland Medical Gazette. 
