The pharmacopoeia of the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland. MDCCCL.
- King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland.
- Date:
- 1850
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The pharmacopoeia of the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland. MDCCCL. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![Sold fy- HESHY GREEU, % MOO^SJTZZJS-Jf § I fc/ancp ^tatianer, 51.1iigh street X ]-. \~i 'MESSES. HODGES AND SMITH Have published the following Standard Medical Works: I. THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. By Fleetwood Churcpiill, M. D., M. R. I. A., &c. 1 voL, fcp., cloth, price 10s. &d. “ We can recommend Dr. Churchill’s work as a very useful treatise on the Diseases of Chil¬ dren.”—Edinburgh MiiDicAU Journal. “ The Author has set forth a vast amount of personal experience in tlie clearest way, and has at the same time furnished his pages so abun¬ dantly from all other writers, that his work con¬ stitutes a complete bibliography of the Diseases of Children.”—Medical Gazette. “ We recommend this work most cordially as a valuable and reliable guide in the treat¬ ment of Diseases of Children.”—American Journal of the Medical Sciences. “ M’e regard this volume as possessing more claims to completeness than any other of the kind with which we are acquainted.”—Dublin Medical Quarterly. “ M'e can truly state that this volume will form a most valuable addition to the library of every medical practitioner.”.—London Journal OP Medicine. “ M^e cannot but admire the unbounded re¬ search and labour undergone by Dr. Churchill in composing this work.”—Dubi.in Medical Press. A TREATISE ON FRACTURES in the Vicinity of Joints, and on certain Forms of Accidental and Congenital Dislocations. By Robert William Smith, M. D., M. R. I. A., Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. Illustrated with 200 Engravings on Wood. One vol., 8vo, Boards, 16s. “ A volume full of practical and interesting observations.”—Sir Henjamin Brodie, AI. D. “ This work is a valuable addition to our pro¬ fessional literature, and a perusal of it will repay even veterans in the science. . . . The Au¬ thor has proved himself a clever surgeon, and he has written in a style concise and devoid of ob¬ scurity.”—Medical Times. “ He has brought forward a great deal of va¬ luable surgical information, equally acceptable to the surgeon and the student.”—Medical Gazette. “ He has endeavoured to throw light on inju¬ ries and affections of an obscure, complicated, or rare character, and has collected many impor¬ tant facts, wliich he has described and discussed clearly and without bias.”- AIedico-Chirur- GicAL Review. “ The reader will gain much additional and valuable information, and a clearer insight into many particulars which are omitted or but lightly passed over in other works. We recom¬ mend each person to consult the work,believing it to be a most valuable addition to surgical li¬ terature. ”—Lancet. “ Undoubtedly the most important addition to the literature of Surgical Science with which we have been presented for many years.”—Dub¬ lin Medical Quarterly. “ The Author’s style is graphic and perspi¬ cuous, and his de.scription of the appearances re¬ sulting from the various injuries, the causes of these appearances, and their value as diagnostics, are so well arranged as to be at once succinct and full, easily understood and remembered.”— Edinburgh AIedical Journal. III. THE SURGICAL ANATOMY OF THE ARTERIES of the Human Body. By Robert Harrison, M. D., V. P.R. C. S. L, &c. Fourth Edition, 1 vol., 12mo, cloth, 9s. [ Continued on next fage.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29317678_0002.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


