Therefore we trust that you will keep this Manual under lock and key, or where no person other than yourself or your regular assistants can have access to it, as it contains all of the information and instructions that you could heretofore have gained by personal attendance on mine or any course of lectures on Embalming, at much expense of time and money, with the single exception of a practical demonstration of the operation of taking up and injecting the Arteries.

This is, however, so fully and minutely described and explained in the Manual, with the aid of accurate drawings of the principal arteries—see Chapters IX, X and XI—that the operation can be easily learned without any other instruction.

E. H. CRANE.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

Chap. [I]. —Ancient Embalming.
[II]. —Care of Ordinary Cases.
[III]. —Cases requiring Cavity Injection.
[IV]. —Cases requiring a full Treatment without Arterial Injection.
[V]. —Treatment in Cases indicating an Absence of immediate Results and final Success.
[VI]. —The Preservative as a Disinfectant and Preventative of Contagious Diseases.
[VII]. —The Preservative put up in Bottles for the use of Unprofessional Persons.
[VIII]. —Embalming by Arterial Injection.
[IX]. —Injection of the Carotid Artery. (Illustration of location of Carotid Artery.)
[X]. —Injection of the Brachial Artery. (Illustration of location of Brachial Artery.)
[XI]. —Injection of the Femoral Artery. (Illustration of location of Femoral Artery.)
[XII]. —Precautions to observe for the Safety of the Operator in Embalming.
[XIII] —Chemical Affinities.
[XIV]. —Advantages to the Undertaker of Scientific Embalming.
[XV]. —Absorption by the Capillaries.
[XVI]. —Embalming Instruments.
[XVII]. —Caution in Storing and Keeping the Preservative.
Appendix, with commendatory letters, Page [48]
Note—Care of the Manual, [141]
Letter to our Customers, [142]

PROF. E. H. CRANE’S

Manual of Instructions

TO UNDERTAKERS.

CHAPTER I.
Ancient Embalming.

It is my object in these instructions to lay before the undertakers of this country a minute and detailed description of the only reliable process, and best method known, for the preservation and embalming of the dead, and at the same time to submit to them the important details to be followed out so condensed and free from unnecessary and superfluous language that the methods used shall be plain to any one, believing that any matter not strictly pertaining to the subject is out of place in a Manual of Instruction.