This section is from the book "The Elements Of The Science Of Nutrition", by Graham Lusk. Also available from Amazon: The Elements of the Science of Nutrition.
Bacteriologic Technic. A Laboratory Guide for the Medical, Dental, and Technical Student. By J. W. H. Eyre, M. D., F. R. S. Edin., Director of the Bacteriologic Department of Guy's Hospital, London. Octavo of 520 pages, 219 illustrations. Cloth, $3.00 net.
SECOND EDITION, REWRITTEN
Dr. Eyre has subjected his work to a most searching revision. Indeed, so thorough was his revision that the entire book, enlarged by some 150 pages and 50 illustrations, had to be reset from cover to cover. He has included all the latest technic in every division of the subject. His thoroughness, his accuracy, his attention to detail make his work an important one. He gives clearly the technic for the bacteriologic examination of water, sewage, air, soil, milk and its products, meats, etc. And he gives you good technic - methods attested by his own large experience. To any one interested in this line of endeavor the new edition of Dr. Eyre's work is indispensable. Published July, 1913
Pathologie Histology. By Frank B. Mallory, M. D., Associate Professor of Pathology, Harvard University Medical School. Octavo of 677 pages, with 497 figures containing 683 original illustrations, 124 in colors. January, 1914 Cloth, $5.50 net .
REPRINTED IN THREE MONTHS
Dr. Mallory here presents pathology from the morphologic point of view. He presents his subject biologically, first by ascertaining the cellular elements out of which the various lesions are built up ; then he traces the development of the lesions from the simplest to the most complex. He so presents pathology that you are able to trace backward from any given end-result, such as sclerosis of an organ (cirrhosis of the liver, for example), through all the various acute lesions that may terminate in that particular end-result to the primal cause of the lesion. The illustrations are most beautiful.
Dr. W. G. MacCallum, Columbia University.
" 1 have looked over the book and think the plan is admirably carried out and that the book supplies a need we have felt very much. I shall be very glad to recommend it".
A Text-Book of Physiology. By William H. Howell, Ph.D., M. D., Professor of Physiology in the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Octavo of 1020 pages, 306 illustrations.
JUST OUT - NEW (7th) EDITION - Published August, 1918
Dr. Howell has had many years of experience as a teacher of physiology in several of the leading medical schools, and is therefore exceedingly well fitted to write a text-book on this subject. Main emphasis has been laid upon those facts and views which will be directly helpful in the practical branches of medicine. At the same time, however, sufficient consideration has been given to the experimental side of the science. The entire literature of physiology has been thoroughly digested by Dr. Howell, and the important views and conclusions introduced into his work. Illustrations have been most freely used.
The Lancet, London.
" This is one of the best recent text-books on physiology, and we warmly commend it to the attention of students who desire to obtain by reading a general, all-round, yet concise survey of the scope, facts, theories, and speculations that make up its subject matter".
Pathogenic Bactena and Protozoa. By Joseph McFarland, M.D., Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology in the Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. Octavo of 807 pages, finely illustrated.
Cloth, $4.00 net. Published November, 1915
EIGHTH EDITION, ENLARGED
Dr. McFarland's book teaches you the laboratory technic with reference to the needs of medical students and practitioners. It brings each micro-organism into a historic, geographic, biologic, and pathologic setting. It dwells upon the anatomic and physiologic disturbances referable to the various micro-organisms. It describes the lesions occasioned by the different micro-organisms. It explains such methods of diagnosis and treatment as grow out of a knowledge of microbiology.
H. B. Anderson, M. D.
Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Trinity Medical College, Toronto. "The book is a satisfactory one, and I shall take pleasure in recommending it to the students of Trinity College".
The Lancet, London.
" It is excellently adapted for the medical students and practitioners for whom it is avowedly written. . . . The descriptions given are accurate and readable".
A Manual of Histology and Organography. By Charles Hill, M. D., formerly Assistant Professor of Histology and Embryology, Northwestern University, Chicago. 12mo of 494 pages, 338 illustrations. Cloth, $2.50 net. Published September, 1917
FOURTH EDITION
Dr. Hill's work is characterized by a completeness of discussion rarely met in a book of this size. Particular consideration is given the mouth and teeth.
Pennsylvania Medical Journal.
" It is arranged in such a manner as to be easy of access and comprehension. To any contemplating the study of histology and organography we would commend this work".
Soil Bacteriology. By E. B. Fred, Ph. D.j Associate Professor of Agricultural Bacteriology, College of Agriculture, University of Wisconsin. 12mo of 170 pages, illustrated. Cloth, #1.25 net.
A Text-Book of Pathology. By Joseph McFarland, M. D., Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology in the Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. Octavo of 856 pages, with 437 illustrations, many in colors. Cloth, $5.00 net.
SECOND EDITION published March. 1910
You cannot successfully treat disease unless you have a practical, clinical knowledge of the pathologic changes produced by disease. For this purpose Dr. McFarland's work is well fitted. It was written with just such an end in view - to furnish a ready means of acquiring a thorough training in the subject, a training such as would be of daily help in your practice. For this edition every page has been gone over most carefully, correcting, omitting the obsolete, and adding the new. Some sections have been entirely rewritten. You will find it a book well worth consulting, for it is the work of an authority.
St. Paul Medical Journal.
" It is safe to say that there are few who are better qualified to give a resume of the modern views on this subject than McFarland. The subject-matter is thoroughly up to date".
Boston Medical and Surgical Journal.
" It contains a great mass of well-classified facts. One of the best sections is that on the special pathology of the blood".
 
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