Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
The first volume of this elaborate work, published last year, was reviewed briefly in these columns, Jan. 21, 1911, p. 215. The second volume contains the chapters on the development of the nervous system (George L. Streeter, Ann Arbor); the chromaffin organs and suprarenal bodies (E. Zuckerkandl, Vienna); the sense-organs (F. Keibel, Freiburg); the digestive tract and the respiratory organs (O. Grosser, Prague; F. T. Lewis, Boston; J. P. Munich, Toronto); the blood, the vascular system and the spleen (C. S. Minot, Boston, H. M. Evans, Baltimore; J. Tandler, Vienna; F. R. Sabin, Baltimore); the urinogenital organs (W. Felix, Zurich), and a concluding chapter on the interdependence of the various developmental processes by F. Keibel. The translation of the chapters originally in German is by Professor McMurrich. To review this manual thoroughly and with critical discrimination is out of the question. The various chapters are written by those well qualified
A Sat, study studied this question.