AND SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS. 



13 



DUNGLISON (ROBLEY), M.D., 



ProfesBOr of Institutes of Medicine in ttie Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. 



HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY. Eighth edition. Thoroughly revised and exten- 

 sively modified and enlarged, with five liundred and thirly-tvi^o iUustralions, In two large and 

 handsomely printed octavo volumes, leather, of about 1500 pages. $7 00. 



In revising Ihis work for its eighth appearance, the author has spared no labor to render it worthy 

 a continuance of the very great favor which has been extended to it by the profesision. The whole 

 contents have been rearranged, and to a great extent remodelled ; the investigations which of late 

 years have been so numerous and so important, have been carefully examined and incorpjrated, 

 and the work in every respect has been brought up to a level with the present s.late of the subject. 

 The object of the author has been to render it a concise but comprehensive treatise, containing the 

 whole body of physiological science, to which the student and man of iscience can at all times refer 

 with the certainty of finding whatever they are in search of, fully presented in all its aspects; and 

 on no former edition has the author bestowed more labor to secure this result. 



We believe that it can truly be said, no more com- 

 plete repertory of tacts upon the subject treated, 

 can anywhere be found. The author lias, moreover, 

 that enviable tact at description and that facility 

 and ease of expression wliich render liim peculiarly 

 acceptable to the easuul, or the studious reader.: 

 This faculty, so requisite in setting forth many 

 graver and less attractive subjects, lends additional 

 charms to one always fascinating. — Boston Med. 

 and Surg. Journal. 



The most complete and satisfactory system of 

 Physiology in the English language. — Amer.Med. 

 Journal . 



The beat work of the kind in the English laa- 

 guage. — Silliman^s Journal. 



The present edition the author has made a poifctt 

 mirror of the science as it is at the present hour. 

 As a work upon physiology proper, the science uf 

 the functions performed by the body, the student will 

 find it all he wishes. — Nashville Journ. of Med. 



That he has succeeded, most admirably succeeded 

 in his purpose, is apparent from the appearance of 

 an eighth edition. It is now the great encyclopaedia 

 on the subject, and worthy of a place in every phy- 

 sician's library. — Western Lancet. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. (A new edition.) 



GENERAL THERAPEUTICS AND MATERIA BIEDICA; adapted for a 



Medical Text-book. With Indexes of Remedies and of Diseases and their Remedies. Sixth 

 Edition, revised and improved. With one hundred and ninety-three illustrations. In two large 

 and handsomely printed octavo vols., leather, of about 1100 pages. $6 00. 



The work will, we have little doubt, be bought 

 and read by the majority of medical students j ica 

 size, arrangement, and reliability recoraiuend u to 

 ail; no one, we venture to predict, will study it 

 without pr(»fit. and there are few to whom it will 

 not be in some measure useful as a work of refer- 

 ence. Theyoun^ practitioner, more especially, will 

 find the copious indexes appendtd to this ediiion of 

 great assistance m the selection and preparation of 

 suitable formuls. — Charleston Med. Journ. and R&- 

 view, Jan. 1858. 



In announcing a new edition of Dr. Dunglison's 

 General Tiierapeutics and Materia Medica, we nave 

 no words of commendation to bestow upon a work 

 whose merits have been heretofore so often and so 

 justly extolled. It must not be supposed, however, 

 that the present is a mere reprint of the previous 

 edition: the character of the author for laborious 

 research, judicious analysis, and clearness of ex- 

 pression, is fully sustained by the numerous addi- 

 tions he has made to ihe work, and the careful re- 

 vision to which he has subjected the whole. — N. A. 

 Medico-Chir. RevieWj Jan. 1658. 



BY THE SAME AtJTHOR. (A new Edition.) 



NEW REMEDIES, WITH FORMULA FOR THEIR PREPARATION AND 



ADMINISTRATION. Seventh edition, with extensive Additions. In one very large octavo 

 volume, leather, of 770 pages. $»3 75. 



Another edition of the '* New Remedies" having been called for, the author has endeavored to 

 add everything of moment thai has appeared t'ince the publication of the lat^t edition. 



The articles treated of in the former editions wiil be found to have undergone considerable ex- 

 pansion in this, in order that the author might be enabled to introduce, as far as practicable, tiie 

 results of the subsequent experience of others, as well as of his own observation and reflection ; 

 and to make the work still more deserving of the extended circulation with which the preceding 

 editions have been favored by the profession. By an enlargement of the page, the numerous addi- 

 tions have been incorporated without greatly increasing the bulk of the volume. — Preface. 



One of the most useful of the author's works. — 

 Southern Medical and Surgical Journal. 



This elaborate and useful volume should be 

 found in every medical library, for as a book of re- 

 ference, for physicians, it is unsurpassed by any 

 other work in existence, and the double index for 

 diseases and for remedies, will be found greatly to 

 •nhance its value. — New York Med. Gazette, 



The great learning of the author, and his remark- 

 able industry in pushing his researches into every 

 source whence information is derivable, have enabled 

 him to throw together an extensive mass of facte 

 and statements, accompanied by full reference to 

 authorities; w^hich last feature renders the work 

 practically valuable to investigators who desire te 

 examine the original papers. — The American Journal 

 of Pharmacy. 



ELLIS (BENJAMIN), M.D. 

 THE MEDICAL FORMULARY : being a Collection of Prescriptions, derived 



from the writings and practice of many of the most eminent physicians of America and Europe. 

 Together with the usual Dietetic Preparations and Antidotes for Poisons. To which is added 

 an Appendix, on the Endermic use of Medicines, and on the use of Ether and Chloroform. The 

 whole accompanied with a few brief Pharmaceutic and Medical Observations. Eleventh edition, 

 revised and much extended by Robert P. Thomas, M. D., Professor ol Materia Medica in the 

 Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. {Prepari7ig.) 



