A treatise on human physiology : designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine / by John C. Dalton, Jr.
- John Call Dalton
- Date:
- 1866
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A treatise on human physiology : designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine / by John C. Dalton, Jr. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University and Columbia University Libraries/Information Services, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the the Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library at Columbia University and Columbia University.
724/732
![mOYNBEE [JOSEPH], F. R. S., Aural Surgeon to and. Lecturer on Surgery at St. Mary''s Hospital. THE DISEASES OF THE EAR: their Nature, Diagnosis, and Treat- ment. With one hundred engravings on wood. Second American edition. In one very handsomely printed octavo volume of 440 pages; extra cloth, $4. The appearance of a volume of Mr. Toynbee's, tliere- foi'e, iu which the subject of aiival disea.se is treated in the most scientific manner, and our linowledge in respect to it placed fully on a par with that which we possess respecting most other organs of the body, is a matter for .sincere congratulation. We may rea- sonably hope that henceforth the subject of this trea- tise will cease to be araoug the opproiria of medical science.—London Medical Review. The work, as was stated at the outset of our notice, is a model of its kind, and every page and paragraph of it are worthy of the most thorough study. Con- sidered all in all—as an original work, well written, philosophically elaborated, and happily illustrated with cases and drawings—it is by far the ablest mo- nograph that has ever appeared on the aiiat^imy and diseases of the ear, and one of the most valuable cou- tributious to the art and science of surgery iu the nineteenth century.—N. Am. Med.-C/iirurg. Reoieio. TA URENCE [JOHN Z.), F. R. C. S., and MOON [ROBERT C), Editor of the OpMhalmic Jieview, &e. Sou.se Surgeon to the Southwark Oph- thalmic Hospital, &c. A HANDY-BOOK OF OPHTHALMIC SURGERY, for the use of Practitioners. With numerous illustrations. In one very handsome octavo volume. {Jiist Ready.) (from the authors' preface.) In writing these pnges it has been our aim to bring the principles and practice of modern ophthalmic surgery within a small compass, to supply the wants of the busy practitioner, who may have neither time nor opportunity to read the innumerable contributions that ophthalmic surgery and science have received within the last fifteen years. In describing symptoms, we have limited ourselves to those which are essential for the recog- nition of disease ; in describing operations, <tc., to those details which are essential for its treat- ment. '' TONES [T. WHARTON), F. R. S., Professor of Ox:>hthalmic Jled. and Surg, in University College, London. THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF OPHTHALMIC MEDI- CINE AND SURGERY. With one hundred and seventeen illustrations. Third and re- vised American, with Additions from the second London edition. In one handsome octavo volume of 455 pages, extra cloth. $3 25. We know ofno work which contains the same amount I It is an excellent pi'actical treatise on the medical of information in the same compass; we especially re- | and sui'gical diseases of the eye, and is well adapted commend the book to the Americau physician and me- I to the wants both of the student and practitioner.— dical student.—Sa'n Francisco Med. Press. \ Chicago Med. Examiner. M ACKENZIE [W.], M.D., Surgeon Oculi.st in Scotland in ordinary to her Majesty, &o. A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES AND INJURIES OF THE EYE. To which is prefixed an Anatomical Introduction explanatory of a Horizontal Section of the Human Eyeball, by Thomas Wharton Jones, F. R. S. From the fourth revised and enlarged London edition. With Notes and Additions by Addinell Hewsox, M. D., Surgeon to Wills Hospital, &e. .tc. In one very large and handsome octavo volume of 1027 pages, extra cloth, with plates and numerous wood-cuts. $6 60. BORLAND [VV. W.), 31. D. DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS; a Compendium of their Diagnosis, Pathology, and Treatment. With illustrations. In one large and handsome octavo volume of about 600 pages, extra cloth. $3 50. Taken as a whole, we can recommend Dr. Morland's I of every medical or surgical practitioner.—Brit, and conipendiumasavery desirableaddltionto thelibrary | For. Med.-Ohir. JRevieu), April, 18.39. ASHTON [T. J.) ON THE DISEASES, INJURIES, AND MALFORMATIONS OF THE RECTUM AND ANUS; with remarks on Habitual Constipation. Second American, from the fourth and enlarged London edition. With handsome illustrations. In one very beautifully printed octavo volume of about -300 pages. $3 25. {Just Issued.) We can recommend this volume of Mr Ashton's in the strongest terras, as contaiuing all tlie latest details of the pathology and treafmeut of diseases connected with the rectum.—Canada 3Ied. Journ., March, ISIjH. This is a new and carefully revised edition of one of the most valuable special treatises that the phy- sician and surgeon can have in his library.—Chicago Medical Examiner, Jan. 1S66, The short period which has elapsed since the ap- pearance of the former American reprint, and the numerous editi.uis published in England, are the best arguments we can otier of the merits, and of the u.se- lessuess of any commeudation on our part of a book already so favorably known to our readers.—Boston Med. and Surg. Journal, Jan. 2.5, 1S66.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21224808_0724.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)