AND SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS. 



29 



TODD (ROBERT BENTLEY), M . D., F. R. S., 



Professor of Physiology in King's College, London; and 



WILLIAM BOWMAN, F. R. S., 



Demonstrator of Anatomy in King's College, London. 



THE PHYSIOLOGICAL ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF MAN. With 



about three hundred large and beautiful illustrations on wood. Complete in one large octavo 



volume, of 950 pages, leather. Price $4 50. 



^^ Gentlemen who have received portions of this work, as published in the " Medical News 

 AND Library," can now complete their copies, if immediate application be made. It will be fur- 

 nished as follows, free by mailj in paper covers, with cloth backs. 



Parts I., II., III. (pp. 25 to 552), $2 50. 



Part IV. (pp. 553 to end, with Title, Preface, Contents, fee), $2 00. 



Or, Part IV., Section II. (pp. 725 to end, with Title, Preface, Contents, fee), $1 25. 



80 well adapted to the wants of the medical student. 



A magnificent contribution to Britieh medicine, 

 anti the American physician who shall fail to peruse 

 It, will have failed to read one of the most instruc- 

 tive books of the nineteenth century. — N. O. Med 

 and Surg, Journal. 



It is more concise than Carpenter's Principles, and 

 more modern than the accessible edition of MQlIer'a 

 Elements; its details are brief^ but sufficierit; its 

 descriptions vivid ; its illustrations exact and copi- 

 ous ; and its language terse and perspicuous. — 

 Charleston Med. Journal. 



We know of no work on the subject of physiologry 



Its completion has been thus Ion? delayed, that the 

 authors might secure accuracy by personal observa- 

 tion. — St. Louis Med. and Surg. Journal. 



Our notice, though it conveys but a very feeble 

 and imperfect idea of the magnitude and importance 

 of the work now under consideration, already trrin- 

 scends our limits ; and, with the indu'gtnce of our 

 readers, and the hope that they will peruse the book 

 for themselves, as we feel we can with confidence 

 recommend it, we leave it in their hands. — The 

 Northwestern Med. and Surg. Journal. 



TODD (R. B.) M. D., F. R. S., &c. 



CLINICAL LECTURES ON CERTAIN DISEASES OF THE URINARY 



ORGANS AND ON DROPSIES. In one octavo volume, 284 pages, fl 50. 



BY THE SAME AUTHOR. (Nov Ready.) 



CLINICAL LECTURES ON CERTAIN ACUTE DISEASES. In one neat 



octavo volume, of 320 pages, extra cloth, f 1 75. 



TOYNBEE (JOSEPH), F. R. S., 



Aural Surgeon to, and Lecturer on Surgery at, St, Mary's Hospital. 



A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE EAR; their Diag- 



nosis, Pathology, and Treatment. Illustrated with one hundred engravings on wood. In one 

 very handsome octavo volume, extra cloth, f 

 The work, as was stated at the outset of our no- 

 tice, is a model of its kind, and every page and para^ 



00. {Just Issued.) 

 ment, and ^vith a sincere and unbiassed judgment, 



^raph 01 it are worthy of the most thorough study. 

 Considered all in all — as an original work, well 

 written, philosophically elaborated, and happily il- 

 lustrated w^ith cases and drawings— it is by far the 

 ablest monograph that has ever appeared on the 

 anatomy and diseases of the ear, and one of themost 

 valuable contributions to the art and science of sur- 

 gery in the nineteenth century. — N. Amer. Medico- 

 Chirurg Review^ Sept. 1860, 



To recommend such a w^ork, even after the mere 

 hint we have given of its ortginal excellence and 

 value, would be a work of supererogation. We are 

 speaking within the limits ot modest acknowledg- 



when we affirm that aa a treatise on Aural Surgery, 

 it is w^ithout a rivhl in our language or any other. — 

 Charleston Med. Journ and Rtview, Stjpt. 1660. 



The work of Mr. Toynbet is undoubtedly, upon 

 the whole the must valuable produciion of tiie kind 

 in any language. The author has long oeen known 

 by his numerous monographs upon subjects con- 

 nected with diseasefc of the ear, and is now regarded 

 as the tiighest authority <in most pomls in ins de- 

 partment of science. Mr Toynbee's work, an we 

 have already said, is undoubtedly the rrlost reliable 

 guide for the study of the diseases of the tar in any 

 language, and should be in the library of every phj- 

 sician.— CAicag-o Med. Journal^ Jaly, 1860. 



WILLIAMS (C. J. B.)i M.D., F. R, S., 



Professor of Clinical Medicine in University College, London, &c. 



PRINCIPLES OF MEDICINE. An Elementaiy View of the Causes, Nature, 



Treatment, Diag-nosis, and Prognosis of Disease; with briei remarkf? on Hyg^ienics, or the pre- 

 servation of health. A new American, from the third and revised London edition. In one octavo 

 volume, leather, ot about 500 pages. 5>2 50. {Jnst Issued.) 



expressed. It is a judgment of almost unqualified 



"We find that the deeply-interesting matter and 

 Btyle of this book have so far fascinated us, that we 

 have unconsciously hung upon its pages, not too 

 I(mg, indeed, for our own profit, but longer than re- 

 viewers can be permitted to indulge. We leave the 

 further analysis to the student and practitioner. Our 

 judgment of the work has already been sufficiently 



praise. — London Lancet. 



A text-book to which no other in our language is 

 comparable. — Charleston Medical Journal. 



No work has ever achieved or maintained a more 

 deserved reputation. — Va. Med. and Surg. Journal. 



WHAT TO OBSERVE 



AT THE BEDSIDE AND AFTER DEATH, IN MEDICAL CASES. 



Publishedundertheauthority of the London Society for Medical Observation. A new American, 



from the second and revised Londou edition. In one very handsome volume, royal 12mo., extra 



cloth. $1 00. 



To the observer who prefers accuracy to blunders I One of the finest aids to a young practitioner we 

 and precision to carelessness, this little book is in- [ have ever seen. — Peninsular Journal of Mfdicint, 

 valuable. — N. £C. Journal of M^dicim, \ 



