16 Lea Brornenrs & Co., PHILADELPHIA AND NEw YORK. 
HORNER (WILLIAM E.). 
SPECIAL ANATOMY AND HIS- 
TOLOGY. Eighth edition, revised and modified. In two large 8vo. 
volumes of 1007 pages, containing 320 engravings. Cloth, $6. 
HUDSON (A.). LECTURES ON THE STUDY OF FEVER. In one 
octavo volume of 308 pages. 
Cloth, $2.50. - 
HUTCHISON (ROBERT) AND RAINY (HARRY). CLINICAL 
METHODS. A GUIDE TO 
THE PRACTICAL STUDY OF 
MEDICINE. In one 12mo. volume of 562 pages, with 137 engrav- 
ings and 8 colored plates. 
Cloth, $3.00. 
A comprehensive, clear and re-| medical knowledge which receive 
markably up-to-date guide to clinical | recognition, wi 
i The illustrations are| test for typhoid and the Neuron 
diagnosis. 
plentiful and excellent. As exam- 
we mention Widal’s 
theory of the nervous system.— 
ples of the more recent additions to | Montreal Medical Journal. 
HUTCHINSON (JONATHAN). SYPHILIS. In one pocket-size 12mo. 
volume of 542 pages, with 8 chromo-lithographie plates. Cloth, $2.25. 
See Series of Clinical Manuals, p. 25. 
HYDE (JAMES NEVINS). 
A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DIS- 
EASES OF THE SKIN. New (4th) edition, thoroughly revised. 
In one octavo volume of 815 pages, with 110 engravings and 12 full- 
page plates, 4 of which are colored. 
This edition has been carefully re- 
vised, and every real advance has 
been recognized. The work answers 
the needs of the general practitioner, 
the specialist, and the student.— The 
Ohio Med. Jour. 
A treatise of exceptional merit 
characterized by conscientious care 
and scientific accuracy. — Buffalo 
Med. Journal. 
A complete exposition of our 
knowledge of cutaneous medicine as 
it exists to-day. The teaching in- 
culcated throughout is sound as well 
JACKSON (GEORGE THOMAS). 
Cloth, $5.25; leather, $6.25. 
as practical—The American Jour- 
nal of the Medical Sciences. 
It is the best one-volume work 
that we know. The student who 
gets this book will find it a useful 
Investment, as it will well serve him 
when he goes into practice.— Vir- 
ginia Medical Semi-Monthly. 
A full and thoroughly modern 
text-book on dermatology. — The 
Pittsburg Medical Review. 
It is the most practical hand- 
book on dermatology with which we 
are acquainted.—The Chicago Med- 
ical Recorder. 
THE READY-REFERENCE 
HANDBOOK OF DISEASES OF THE SKIN. New (3d) edition. 
In one 12mo. volume of 637 pages, with 75 illustrations and a colored 
plate. Just ready. Cloth, $2.50, net. 
Asa student’s manual, it may be 
considered beyond criticism. 
The | best 
Without doubt forms one of the 
aides for the beginner in der- 
book is singularly full.—St. Louis meiclogy that is to be found in the 
Medical and Surgical Journal. 
JAMIESON (W. ALLAN). 
DISEASES 
English language.— Medicine. 
OF THE SKIN. Third 
edition. In one octavo volume of 656 pages, with 1 engraving and 9 
double-page chromo-lithographie plates. 
Cloth, $6. 
