Page:Psychopathia Sexualis (tr. Chaddock, 1892).djvu/467

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

Medical Publications of The F. A. Davis Co., Philadelphia. MASSE Y Electricity in the Diseases of Women. With Special Reference to the Application of Strong Currents. By G. Betton Massey, M.D., Physician to the Gynaecological Department of the Howard Hospital ; late Electro-therapeutist to the Philadelphia Orthopaedic Hospital and Infirmary for Nervous Diseases, etc. Second Edition. Revised and Enlarged. With New and Original Wood-Engravings. Handsomely hound in Dark-Blue Cloth. 240 pages. 12mo. No. 5 in the Physician*' and Students' Bendy- Reference Series. This work is presented to the profession as the most complete treatise yet issued on the electrical treatment of the diseases of women, and is destined to fill the increasing demand for clear and practical instruction in the handling and use of strong currents after the recent methods first advocated hy Apostoli. The whole suhject is treated from the present stand-point of electric science with new and original illustrations, the thorough studies of the author and his wide clinical experience rendering him an authority upon electricity itself and its therapeutic applications. The author has enhanced the practical value of the work hy including the exact details of treatment and results in a number of cases taken from his private and hospital practice. Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.50, net; in Great Britain, Ss. 6d. ; in France, 9 fr. 35. A new edition of this practical manual at- tests the utility of its existence and the recog- nition of its merits. The directions are simple, easy to follow and to put into practice; the ground is well covered, and nothing is assumed, the entire book being the record of expe- rience. -Journal of Nervous and Menial Diseases. It is only a few months since we noticed the first edition of this little book ; and it is only necessary to add now that we consider it the best treatise on this subject we have seen, and that the improvements introduced into this edition make it more valuable still. Boston Medical and Surgical Journ. The style is clear, but condensed. Useless details are omitted, the reports of cases being pruned of all irrelevant material. The book is an exceedingly valuable one, and represents an amount of study and experience which is only appreciated after a careful reading. Med ical Record . Physicians' Interpreter. In Four Languages (English, French, German, and Italian). Specially Arranged for Diagnosis by M. von V. The object of this little work is to meet a need often keenly felt by the busy, physician, namely, the need of some quick and reliable method of com- municating intelligibly with patients of those nationalites and languages unfa- miliar to the practitioner. The plan of the book is a systematic arrangement of questions upon the various branches of Practical Medicine, and each question is so worded that the only answer required of the patient is merely Yes or No. The questions are all numbered, and a complete Index renders them always available for quick reference. The book is written by one who is well versed in English, French, German, and Italian, being an excellent teacher in all those languages, and who has also had considerable hospital experience. Bound in Full Russia Leather, for carrying in the pocket. Size, 5 x 2f inches. 206 pages. Price, post-paid, in the United States and Canada, $1.00, net; in Great Britain, 6s. ; in France, 6 fr. 20. Many other books of the same sort, with more extensive vocabularies, have been pub- lished, but, from their size, and from their being usually devoted to equivalents in Eng- lish and one other language only, they have not had the advantage which is pre-eminent in this convenience. It is handsomely printed, and bound in flexible red leather in the form of a diary. It would scarcely make itself felt in one's hip-pocket, and would insure its bearer against any ordinary conversational difficulty in dealing with foreign-speaking people, who are constantly coining into our city hospitals. New York Medical Journal. This little volume is one of. the most inge- nious aids to the physician Vhich we have seen. We heartily commend the book to any one who, being without a knowledge of the foreign languages, fa obliged to treat those who do not know our own language. St. Louis Courier of Medicine. (13)