JUST PUBLISHED— A NEW AND VALUABLE WORK ON 



Practical Electricity 



MEDICINE AND SURGERY. 



-BY- 



G. A. LIEBIG, Jr., Ph.D., 



Assistant in Electricity, Johns Hopkins University ; Lecturer on Medical Electricity College of Phy- 

 sicians and Surgeons, Baltimore: Member of the American Institute ' 

 of Electrical Engineers, etc., 



-AND- ' 



GEORGE H. ROHE, M.D., 



Professor of Obstetrics and Hygiene, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore ; Visiting Physician 



to Bay View and City Hospitals; Director of the Maryland Maternite ; Associate 



Editor "Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences," etc. 



PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED BY WOOD-ENGRAVINGS AND ORIGINAL DIAGRAMS, AND PUBLISHED IN ONE 



HANDSOME ROYAL OCTAVO VOLUME OF ABOUT 400 PAGES, BOUND IN EXTRA CLOTH. 

 NET PRICE, UNITED STATES and CANADA, $2.00, Post-paid; GREAT BRITAIN, 8s. ft*. ; FRANCE, 12 fr. 40. 



The pui-t on Physical Eleetricity, written by Dr. Liebig, one of>the recognized 

 authorities on the science in. the United States, treats fully such topics of interest as 

 (Storage Batteries, Dynamos, the Electric Light, and the Principles and Practice of 

 Electrical Measurement in their relations to Medical Practice. 



Professor Rohe, who writes on Electro-Therapeutics, discusses at length the recent 

 developments , of Electricity in the treatment of stricture, enlarged prostate, uterine 

 iibroids, pelvic cellulitis, and other diseases of the male and female genito -urinary organs. 



The amplications of Electricity in dermatology, as well as in the diseases of the. 

 nervous system, are also fully considered. 



THE SECOND VOLUME IN THE PHYSICIANS' AND STUDENTS' 

 READY REFERENCE SERIES. 



HAND-BOOK 



OF * 



Materia Medicajharmacjj, and Therapeutics 



By CT7THBERT BOWEN, M.D., B.A., 



Editor of "Notes on Practice." 



EXTRACT FROM THE PREFACE.— " While this is essentially a Student's Manual, alarge 

 amount of matter has been incorporated which, it is hoped, will render it a useful reference-book to the young 

 graduate who is just entering on his professional career, and more particularly the individual whose sphere 

 of work demands a more practical acquaintance with pharmaceutical processes than is required of the ordi- 

 nary city practitioner. Great care has been taken throughout the book to familiarize the student with the 

 best methods of administering the various drugs he will be called upon to use, and with this object a large 

 number of standard prescriptions have been selected from the works of the most eminent authorities, which 

 he can either adopt, with modifications to suit particular cases, or use as models on which to construct his own 

 formulae." 



This excellent manual comprises in its 366 small 

 octavo pages about asmuch sound and valuable in- 

 formation on the subjects indicated in its title as 

 could weU be crowded into the compass. The book 

 is exhaustively arid correctly indexed, and of a con- 

 venient form. The paper, press-work, and binding 

 are excellent, and the typography (long primer and 

 brevier) is highly to be commended, as opposed to 

 the nonpareil and agate usually used incompendsof 

 this sort, and which are destructive to vision and 

 temperalike. — St. Louis Med. and Surg. your. 



In going through it, we have been favorably im- 

 pressed by the plain and practical suggestions in 

 regard to prescription writing, and the metric sys- 

 tem, and the qther things which must be known in 

 order to write good and accurate prescriptions. — 

 Medical and Surgical Reporter..^ 



Many works claim more in their title-pages than ■ 

 can be verified further on, but the only adverse j 



criticism we can make on this volume is that it does 

 not claim enough. — Southern California Prac- 

 titioner. 



The book is one of the very best of its class.— 

 Columbus Medical journal. 



This is a very condensed and valuable resume 

 of the .drugs recognized by the United States Phar- 

 macopoeia, and all the officinal and important 

 preparations. — So-Uthern Medical Record. 



Dr. ■ Bowen's work is a very valuable one indeed, 

 and will be found " to fill a want" beyond a doubt. 

 — Cincinnati Medical News. 



It is short and concise in its treatment of the 

 subjects, yet it gives sufficient to gain a very correct 

 knowledge of everything that comes under this head- 

 ing. This is a ready work for the country physician, 

 who mustof necessity have a more practical acquain- 

 tance with pharmaceutical processes. — Medical 

 Brief. 



One !2mo volume of 370 pages. Handsomely Bound in Dark-Blue Cloth. 



Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.40, net; 



in Great Britain, 6s. 6d.; in France, 9 fr. 25. 



rF A; nAVM. MeHir.nl Publisher, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.) 



