The Medical times and gazette, Volum 1

Forside
1875
 

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Side 100 - The following were the questions submitted to the candidates at the primary examination for the diploma of membership of the Royal College of Surgeons on Saturday last.
Side 160 - The State of the Dwellings of the Poor in the Rural Districts of England, with special regard to the improvements that have taken place since the middle of the eighteenth century, and their influence on the health and morals of the inmates.
Side 191 - Poupart's ligament, at a point midway between the anterior superior spinous process of the ilium and the symphysis pubis...
Side 209 - ... a copy of the warranty with a written notice stating that he intends to rely on it and specifying the name and address of the person from whom he received it...
Side 173 - We shall never certainly be able to discover how men were led to the use of the hot infusion of the leaves of a certain shrub (tea), or of a decoction of certain roasted seeds (coffee). Some cause there must be which would explain how the practice has become a necessary of life to whole nations.
Side 165 - After the terrible affair in the water, the party of Tagamoio, who was the chief perpetrator, continued to fire on the people there and fire their villages. As I write I hear the loud wails on the left bank over those who are there slain, ignorant of their many friends now in the depths of Lualaba. Oh, let Thy kingdom come! No one will ever know the exact loss on this bright sultry summer morning, it gave me the impression of being in Hell.
Side 193 - What dire necessities on every hand Our art, our strength, our fortitude require 1 Of foes intestine what a numerous band Against this little throb of life conspire ! Yet Science can elude their fatal ire Awhile, and turn aside Death's...
Side 165 - I am not of a demonstrative turn ; as cold, indeed, as we islanders are usually reputed to be, but this disinterested kindness of Mr. Bennett, so nobly carried into effect by Mr. Stanley, was simply overwhelming.
Side 166 - Livingstone was kneeling by the side of his bed, his body stretched forward, his head buried in his hands upon the pillow. For a minute they watched him: he did not stir, there was no sign of breathing ; then one of them, Matthew, advanced softly to him and placed his hands to his cheeks.
Side 58 - ... has led us to accumulate in our midst a vast store of human remains in every stage and condition of decay. (6.) That the remedy for such evils is not in cremation, but in a sensible recognition of, and a timely submission to, a welldefined law of Nature, and by legislative action to enforce the provisions of that law.

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