An Important Aid to Students in the Study of Anatomy. 

 Three Charts of 



The Nervo- Vascular System. 



PART I.— THE NERVES. 



PART II.-THE ARTERIES. 



PART III.— THE VEINS. 



Arranged by W. HENRY PRICE, A.M., M.D., AND S. POTTS EAGLETON. 

 ENDORSED BY LEADING ANATOMISTS. 



PRICE, IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA, 50 CENTS, NET, COMPLETE; 

 GREAT BRITAIN, 2s. 6d. FRANCE, 3 fr. 60. 



'TEE NERVO-VASCULAR SYSTEM OP CHARTS" far Excels Every Other System 

 in their Completeness, Compactness, and Accuracy. • 



JPtvrt I. The Nerves.— Gives in a clear form not only the Cranial 

 and Spinal Nerves, shpwing the formation of the different Plexuses 

 and their branches, but also the complete distribution of the 

 boiPATHETio Nerves, thereby making it the most complete and 

 concise chart of the Nervous System yet published. ' 



Part II. The Arteries. — Gives a unique grouping of the Arterial 

 System, showing the divisions and subdivisions of all the vessels, 

 beginning from the heart and tracing their continuous distribution 

 to the periphery, and showing at a glance the terminal branches 

 of each artery. 



Part III. The Veins. — Shows how the blood from the periphery 

 of the body is gradually collected by the larger veins, and these 

 , coalescing forming still larger vessels, until the£ finally trace 

 themselves into the Right Auricle of the heart. N 



It is therefore readily seen that "The Nervo- Vascular System of 

 Charts " offers the following superior advantages : — ■ 



1. It is the only arrangement which combines the Three Systems, 

 and yet each is perfect and distinct in itself. 



2. It is the only instance of the Cranial, Spinal, and Sympathetic 

 Nervous Systems being represented on one chart. 



3. From its neat size and clear type, and being printed only upon 

 one side, it may be tacked up in any convenient place, and is always 

 ready for freshening up the memory and reviewing for examination. 



4. The nominal price for whic^i these charts are sold places them 

 within the reach of all. 



For the student of anatomy there can possibly be no 

 more concise way of acquiring a knowledge of the nerves, 

 veins, and arteries of the human-system. It presents at a 

 jjlance their trunks and branches in the great divisions of 

 ihe body. It wall save ft world of tedious reading, and will 

 impress itself on, the mind as no ordinary vade mecum, 

 even, could. Its price is nominal and its value inestima- 

 ble. No student should be without it. — Pacific Record of 

 Medicine and Surgery^ 



We take pleasure in calling attention to these charts, 

 as they are so arranged that a study of them will serve to 

 impress them more indellibly on your mind than can be 

 -gained in' any other way. They are also valuable for 

 reference. —Medical Brief. 



These are three admirably arranged charts for the 

 use of students, to assist in memorizing their anatomical 

 studies. — Buffalo Med. and Surg. Jour. 



This is a series of charts of the nerves, arteries, and 



veins of the human body, giving names, origins, distribu- 

 tions, and functions, very convenient as memorizers and 

 reminders. /A similar series, ' prepared by the late J. H. 

 Armshy, of Albany, N.Y., and framed, long found a. place 

 in the study of the writer, and on more than one occasion 

 was'thi means of saving precious moments that must 

 otherwise have been devoted to tumbling the pages of ana- 

 tomical works. — Med. Age. 



These three charts will be of great assistance to 

 medical students. They can be hung on the, wall and 1 read 

 across any ordinary room. , The price is only fifty cents for 

 the set. — Practice, [ 



These charts have been carefully arranged, and will 

 prove to be very convenient for ready reference. They 



are three in number, each constituting a part 



It is a high recommendation that these charts have been 

 examined and approved by John B. Deaver, M.D., Demon- 

 strator of Anatomy in the University of Pennsylvania.— 

 Pacific Med t and Surg. Jour, and ^Vestem Lancet. 



(F. A. DAVIS, Medical Publisher Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.) 



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