CHEMICAL AND MICROSCOPICAL 

 DIAGNOSIS 



By FRANCIS CARTER WOOD, M.D. 



Adjunct Professor of Clinical Pathology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia 

 University, New York; Pathologist to St. Luke's Hospital, New York 



With One Hundred and Eighty-eight Illustrations in the Text and 

 Nine Colored Plates 



8vo. Cloth, I5.00 net 



"No practitioner of medicine, whatever may be his special 

 work, can afford to be without some book of this sort, and the 

 present volume may frankly be recommended as satisfactory." 



— New York Medical Journal. 



"We regard this as one of the most important medical books 

 that have appeared of late, and venture the opinion that it will not 

 be long before it will be found in the hands of every laboratory 

 worker, whether teacher or pupil." — Buffalo Medical Journal. 



"The work at present before us may be unhesitatingly pro- 

 nounced one of the best." — Medical Review of Reviews. 



"It is unnecessary to emphasize, in the present state of medical 

 knowledge, the importance of microscopical and chemical exami- 

 nations of the blood and the secretions and excretions of the body 

 in the diagnosis of disease. Indeed, this has been so universally 

 appreciated within recent years that a distinct and increasing de- 

 mand has been created for works of reference on these and allied 

 subjects. Several such books already occupy honored positions in 

 this literature, and Dr. Wood's book, the subject of this review, is 

 the latest addition'to the library of clinical pathology. Dr. Wood's 

 book is undoubtedly the most complete book of its kind that has 

 "appeared in the English language." 



— California Slate Journal of Medicine. 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK 



