Volume 1
A manual of medical treatment or clinical therapeutics / by I. Burney Yeo.
- Yeo, I. Burney (Isaac Burney), 1835-1914.
- Date:
- 1893
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A manual of medical treatment or clinical therapeutics / by I. Burney Yeo. Source: Wellcome Collection.
657/664 (page 5)
![List of Clinical] Manuals {continued). Diseases of the Breast. By Thomas Bryant, F.R.C.S., Surgeon to, and Lecturer on Surgery at, Guys Hospital. With 8 Chrome Plates. 9S. Mr. Bryant is so well known, both as an author and a surgeon, that we are absolved from the necessity of speaking fully or critically of his work.—r/(« Lancet. SupMUs. By Jonathan Hutchinson, F.R.S., F.R.C.S., Consulting Surgeon to the London Hospital and to the Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital. With 8 Chromo Plates. 9S. A valuable addition to the series of CUnical Manuals of its publishers, by an expert and accomplished writer, moderate in tone, judicious in spirit, and yet expressmg the decided convictions of one whose experience entides him to speak mth authority. The student no matter what may be bis age, will find in this compact treatise a valuable presentation of a vastly important subject. We know of no better or more compre- hensive treatise on sy^'biSs.—Medical News, Philadelphia. Fractures and Dislocations. By T. Pickering Pick, F.R.C.S., Surgeon to, and Lecturer on Surgery at, St. George's Hospital. 8S. 6d. We must express the pleasure with which we have perused the book, and our especial admiration for the lucidity of the author's style, and the simplicity of ha direc- tions for the application of apparatus; in the latter respect it is always diffacult to combine clearness with brevity, but herein Mr. Pick has been most successfuL — Glasgow Medical Jmtrnal. Surgical Diseases of the Kidney. By Henry Morris, M.B., F.R.C.S., Surgeon to, and Lecturer on Surgery at, Middlesex Hospital. With 6 Chromo Plates. 9s. Mr. Morris writes clearly and forcibly, and handles his subject very thoroughly, so that the'reader rises from the perusal of the work impressed with its importance. It would be difficult to find these subjects treated more carefully and thoroughly.— Medical yournal. Insanity and Allied Neuroses. By George H. Savage, M.D., Medical Superintendent and Resident Physician to Bethlern Royal Hospital, and Lecturer on Mental Diseases at Guy's Hospital. 8S. 6d. Dr. Savage's groupiijg of insanity is practical and convenient, and the observations n each group are acute, extensive, and well arranged.—The Lancet. Intestinal Obstruction. By Frederick Treves, F.R.C.S., Surgeon to, and Lecturer on Anatomy at, the London HospiUl. 8S. 6d. Throughout the work there Is abundant evidence of patient labour, acute observa- tion, and sound reasoning, and we believe Mr. Treves's book will do much to advance our knowledge of a very difficult subject.—The Lancet. Diseases of the Tongue. By H. T. Butlin, F.R.C.S., Assistant Surgeon to St. Bartholomew's Hospital. With 8 Chromo Plates. 9S. Mr. Butlin may be congratulated upon having written an excellent manual, scientific in tone, practical in aim, and elegant in literary form. The coloured plates rival, if not excel, some of the most careful specimens of art to be found in the pages of European medical publications.—British Medical youmal. Surgical Diseases of Children. By Edmund Owen, M.B., F.R.C.S., Senior Surgeon to the Children's Hospital, Great Ormond Street, and Surgeon to, and Co-Lecturer on Surgery at, St. Mai-y's Hospital. With 4 Chromo Plates. 9s. Mr. Owen's volume will rank as an invaluable risumi of the subject on which he treats, and should readily take its place as a reliable and compact guide to the surgery of children.—Medical Press and Circular.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b20417706_001_0657.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)