The principles and practice of gynaecology / by Thomas Addis Emmet ... With one hundred and thirty illustrations.
- Thomas Addis Emmet
- Date:
- 1879
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The principles and practice of gynaecology / by Thomas Addis Emmet ... With one hundred and thirty illustrations. 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.
894/902 page 30
![jyURNETT {CHARLES H.), M.A , M.D., -*-^ Aural Surg, to the Presb. Mosp., Surgeon-in-i:'harge nf the Injlr for Dis. of the Ear, Pkila. THE EAR, ITS ANATOMY. PHYSIOLOGY, AND DISEASES. A Practical Treatise for the Use of Medical Students and Practitioners. In one hand- some octavo volume of 615 pages, with eighty-seven illustrations : cloth, $4 50 ; leather, $5 50. {Just Ready.) Recent progress in the investigation of the structures of the ear, and advances made in the modes of treating its diseases, would seem to render desirable a new work in which all the re- sources of the most advanced science shouid be placed at the disposal of the practitioner. This it has been the aim of Dr. Burnett to accomplish, and the advantages which he has enjoyed in the special study of the subject are a guarantee that the result of his labors will prove of service to the profession at large, as well as to the specialist in this derartment. Foremost among the numerous recent contribn- medical stndeut, and its study will well repay the tions to aural literatare will be ranked this work busy pracntioner in the pleasaie he will derive from of Dr. Burnett. It is impossible to do justice to the agreeable style in which many otherwise dry this volume of over 600 pages in a necessarily brief au.l mos;iy unknown subjects are treated. To the notice. It must suflRce to add that tbe booi is pro- sjiecialist the wurk is of the highest value, and bis fasely and accurately illnsrratef!, the references are sense of graiitude to Dr. Burnett will, we hope, be conscientiously acknowledged, while tbe result has proportionate to ihe amount of benefit 1:6 can obtain been to produce a treatise which wiil hencefortti from the careful study of ibe book, and a constant rank with the classic writings of Wilde and Von reference to its trustworthy pages.— Edinbu gh Trolsch.—TAe Land. Prattiti'.ncr, May, 1S79 Med. -Jour., Aug. 1S7S. „ ^ .,, I j„ , „!,; i,i,„^„i.„o^ The book is designed especially for tbe nse of .-tu- On account of the great advances which have been ,^^^ ,^^ |raciitioners, and places at their made of late years in otology, aud of the incre.^eu ^. .^^ ^^^^ valuable mHteri-il. Such a book as int. rest manifested in It, the medical profession will j,,/ .g,^^, ^„e .l,i„k, haslongbeen needed, and welcome this new work which presents clearly and ^ P ,,^ ^.^^i^^e the author^on his success in concisely us present '^^^^l^ ^}^l^\^l^^lll'''^^X filling the gip. Both scudent and practitioner can eating the direction in which fur her.esearehes can ^^.^^ « °^P deal of benefit. It is be most profitably carried on JJr^ Bu.n nom h.^^ pr.fu-ely and beautifully iilustrated.-i^'. Y. Eos- own matared experience, and availing himself oi '^ , ^;',^,,. ^^t is ic-., the observations and discoveries of others, has pro- P'tal Gazette, Oct lo, IS/7. duced a work, which as a text-book, stands/'(ciZe 1 Dr. Burnett is to be commended for having written ■nrincep.s in our language. We bid marked several | the best book on the subject in the English language, pa-sa2es as well worthy of quotation and the alien-! and especially for the care and attention he has tion oT the general practitioner, but their number and given to the scientific side of the subject.—N. Y. the space at our command forbid. Perhaps it is bet- Med Journ., Dec. 1S77. ter, as the book ought to be in Ihe hands of every . r'AYLOR [ALFRED S.),M.D., Lecturer on Med. Jurisp. and 0tiemisiry in Guy's So.fxntal. POISONS IN RELATION TO MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE AND MEDICINE. Third American, from the Third and P.,evised English Edition. In one large octavo volume of SoO pages; cloth, §5 50 ; leather, |6 50. {J^ist Issued.) Tbe present is based upon the two previous edi- , being described which give rise to legal iLvestiga- tions; butthecompleieTevisiou rendered necessary , tions. —:2'Ac Clinic, >ov. 6, 1S7.9. by time has converted it into a new work. This; Dr. Taylor hat brought to bear on the compilation statement from the preface contains all that it is de- j „/ ^jjjg volume, stores of learning, experience, and sired to know in reference to the new edition. The ] practical acquaiLtance with his subject probably fur works of this author are already in th« library of j beyond what any other living authority on toxicol- every physician who is liable to be called upon for ; ogy could have amassed or utilized. He has fully medi'eo-legal testimony (and wh t nei.> not?;, sothat | sustained bis rCfjUtation by the consummate skill all that is required to be knowu about the present i ^^j legal acumen he has displayed in the arrange- book is that the author has kept it abreast wiih the mem of tne subject-matter, and the result is a work times. What makes it now, as always, especially ^ y„ poisous wliicn will be indispensable to every btu- valudble to the practitioner is its conciseness ani , jent or practitioner in law and medicine.—The Duo- practicalcharacter, only those poisonous substances Ua Journ. K-f Med Sci., Oct. 1S7.5. 75r THE SAME AUTHOR. MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE. Seventh American Edition. Edited by John J. Reese, M.D., Prcf of Med. Juri-<p. in the Univ. of Penn. In one large octavo volume of nearly 900 pages. 01oth,§5 DO; leather, $6 00. {Late/y Issued.) To tbe members of the legal and medical profes- best aaihority on this specialty in our language. On siou It is unuece:<sary to say anything commenda- this point, however, ive will -ay that weconsider Di. tory'of Taylor's Medical Jurisprudence. We might Taylor to be thesafe-<l medico-legal aalliority Jofol- as well undertake to speak of the nerit of Chilly's low, ingeneral, with which we areacqiiaintedin any Pleadings.—C'/2ic'/po Legal Ntws, Oct. It;, 1S7X. language.—Ka Ulin. liecird. -Nov. 1»73. It is beyond question the most attractive as well This las ted ition of the Manual is probably Ihe best as most reliable manual of medical jurisprudence of ah,*.'* it contains more material and is worked up published in the English \tt.n$na.ge.—Arn. JouT7tal to the latest vi w» .>t the auinor asexpressed in tbe of Syphilography, Oct. 1&73. Iji^t edition of the Principles. Dr. Keesc, the editor It isaltogethersuperfluousforustoofferanything of the Manual, has done everything to make his iu behalf of a work on medicaljurisprudence by an ?rorkacceptable to bis medical countrymen.—S. \. author who is almost universally esteemed to be (be Mad. Sxcurd, Jan. l.'). Is?!. i>r THE SAME AUTHOR. THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF MEDICAL JURISPRU- DENCE. Second Edition, Revised, with numerous Illustrations. In two large octavo volumes, cloth, $10 00 ; leather, $12 00 This great work is now recognized in England as the fullest and most authoritative treatise on every department of its important .subject. In laying it, in its improved form, before the Amer- ican profession, the poblisher trusts that it will assume the same position in this country.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21223270_0894.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


