36 
D, APPLETON & COS ILLUSTRATED 
PEREIRA. Dr. Pereira’s Elements of Materia Medica and 
Therapeutics. 
Abridged and adapted for the Use of Medical and 
Pharmaceutical Practitioners and Students, and comprising all the Medi- 
cines of the British Pharmacopeia, with such others as are frequently 
ordered in Prescriptions, or required by the Physician. 
Rosert Bentiey and THxopuinus Repwoop. 
Edited by 
New edition. Brought 
down to 1872. Royal 8vo. 1,093 pages. Cloth, $7.00; sheep, $8.00. 
PEYER. An Atlas of Clinical Microscopy. 
By ALEXANDER 
Preyer, M.D. Translated and edited by Atrrep ©. Grgarp, M. D., As- 
sistant Surgeon United States Army. 
script of the second German edition, with Additions. 
Illustrations, Chromo-Lithographs, 
‘¢ All who are interested in clinical microscopy 
will be pleased with the design and execution of 
this work, and will feel under obligation to the au- 
thor, translator, and pene for placing so valu- 
able a work in their hands. The plates in which 
are figured the various urinary ors deposits 
are especially fine, and the various forms of tube- 
casts, hyaline, waxy, eee and mucous,’ are 
depicted with great fidelity and accuracy.””— 
Philadelphia Medical Times. 
“ To those students and practitioners of medi- 
cine who are interested in microscopical work and 
who are familiar with the use of this valuable aid 
to human vision in the study of nature, the present 
work will face of incalculable value, since it 
represents the original work of an accomplished 
microscopist and artist. Accompanying the plates 
is a text of explanatory notes showing the various 
methods of working with the microscope and the 
significance of what is observed. The plates have 
been most handsomely printed. We have seen 
nothing in this special line of study that will com- 
First American, from the manu- 
90 Plates, with 105 
Cloth, $6.00. 
pare in point of accuracy of detail and artistic 
effect with the work under consideration.”— 
Maryland Medical Journal. - 
‘There is probably no work in any language 
that: will prove of as much real service to the be- 
ginner in microscopy as the one before us, and this 
value is due to the number and excellence of the 
plates with which it is literally crowded. One 
ordinary plate is often worth ten pages of explana- 
tion; who then can reckon the assistance lent by 
a life-size, well-colored plate such as we have 
here?” —Leoria Medical Monthly. 
“ This valuable and beautiful addition to scien- 
tific and medical literature can not but be destined 
to receive a warm welcome from a wide circle of 
students and practitioners. . . . So practically 
useful are its contents, and so attractive—one may 
almost say artistic—is the form in which it is pre- 
sented, that to sec it is to covet it; to own it is to 
oe in its possession.” —Vew England Medical 
azette. 
Square 8vo. 
POMEROY. The Diagnosis and Treatment of Diseases of the 
Ear. By Oren D. Pomzroy, M.D., Surgeon to the Manhattan Eye and 
Ear Hospital, etc. 
larged. 8vo. Cloth, $3.00. 
‘The several forms of aural disease are dealt 
with in a manner exceedingly satisfactory. The 
work is quite exhaustive in its scope, and will 
represent an authority on this subject which we 
believe will be duly appreciated by the pro- 
fession.”’—Medical Record. 
“The author uses good language, telling in a 
clear and interesting manner what he has to say. 
The book is a valuable one for both students and 
practitioners.”—ZLancet and Clinte. 
“ The author’s opportunity to know of what he 
writes has been abundant, and the work itself 
shows that he has made good use of nis informa- 
tion. We have not the slightest reason for not 
commending it not only to the otologist but alxo 
to the general student.”’— Therapeutic Gazette. 
“It is plain and practical in every way, and 
will long be one of the standard works on the sub- 
ject.””— Peoria Medical Monthly. 
With 100 Illustrations. 
New edition, revised and en- 
“Well arranged and well written, and not too 
scientific.” — Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. 
“This second edition has been carefully re-_ 
vised, and a number of pages as well as some 
illustrations have been added, so as to render the 
volume an accurate representative of the science of 
aura] surgery as it exists to-day.”—Medical and 
Surgical Reporter. 
“< Every country practitioner and those in small 
towns—in fact, every doctor who wants to treat 
ear-diseases—would be better prepared by having 
read Dr. Pomeroy’s ve! eeollent text-book.””— 
Daniels Texas Medical Jeurnol. 
“Not the least of the qualifications which have 
enabled Dr. Pomeroy to produce so satisfactory @ 
work of the kind is his exceptionally large experi- 
ence in the department of otology, and the pages 
of his treatise bear constant testimony to its extent 
and varied character.”—G@aillard’s Med. Journal. 
