The Treatment of Fractures by Mobolization and Massage 



By JAMES B. MENNELL, 



HOUSE SURGEON AND CASUALTY ASSISTANT, ST. THOMAS' HOSPITAL, LONDON. WITH 

 AN INTRODUCTION BY DR. LUCAS-CHAMPONNlfeRE, CHIRURGIEN HONORAIRE DE l'HOTEL 

 DIEU, MEMBRE DE L*ACADfeMIE DE MEDICINE, PRESIDENT DE LA SOClfeTE INTER- 

 NATIONALE DE CHIKURGIE, ETC. 



Clothj 8vo, 458 pp., ill., $5.00 net 



Dr. Mennell has made his work a practical, rather than a pathological, treatment of 

 fractures by methods which, although well known on the Continent, have as yet been 

 little used in America and England. 



Dr. Mennell's success in this method of treatment of fractures has been marked and 

 his experience has been ample. His ideas are revolutionary but are worthy of very seri- 

 ous consideration, and we would strongly urge every physician who has occasion to 

 reduce fractures to read this book. 



Mind and Health 



By EDWARD E. WEAVER, Ph.D. 



Clothj 500 pp., i2mo, $2.00 net 



This treatise Is an attempt to embody some of the latest results of the psychological 

 study of the influence of mental states upon health. After a thorough psychological 

 discussion, a painstaking examination is made of various systems of healing of a reli- 

 gious character from the standpoint of present-day scientific mental healing. Both the 

 Strong points and weaknesses of these systems are pointed out. 



The People's Medical Guide 



Points for the Patient, Notes for the Nurse, Matter for the Medical Adviser, Succor for 

 the Sufferer, Precepts for the Public, 



By JOHN GRIMSHAW, M.D. 



B.s. (lond.), d.p.h. (camb.), m.r c.s. (eng.), etc. 



Cloth, 83Q pp., index, glossary, ill., 8vo, $3.00 net 



A medical guide for the people, thoroughly modern in matter and tone, embracing all 

 the remarkable advances of the last decade. Besides constituting a plea for a reform in 

 medical education, this book is an exposition of the different branches of medical work 

 and social reform. 



Biological Aspects of Human Problems 



By CHRISTIAN A. HERTER, M.D. 



LATE professor OF PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS IN COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 



Cloth, 344 pp., i2mo.j $1.50 net 



This work gives the personal convictions of a foremost authority on the far-reaching 

 effects of Biology. Dr. Herter first discusses in what respects the animal body may be 

 regarded as a mechanism, next he treats of the nature of the self-preservative and sex- 

 ual instincts which appear to be the most fundamental of all instinctive qualities in 

 living protoplasm. Following this the various instincts of human nature, such as those 

 which relate to imitation, affection, love of beauty, the awe of the powerful and unin- 

 telligible, are taken up, while finally the tendencies in development in education, litera- 

 ture, music, art, business, politics and science, are considered. There has been no saner 

 exposition of the essential duties of life. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 



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