The North American Journal of Homeopathy, Volum 66

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American Medical Union, 1918
 

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Side 1030 - Progressive Medicine: A Quarterly Digest of Advances, Discoveries and Improvements in the Medical and Surgical Sciences. Edited by Hobart Amory Hare, MD, Professor of Therapeutics and Materia Medica in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia; Physician to the Jefferson Medical College Hospital, etc. Volume I. March, 1899. Surgery of the Head, Neck and Chest; Diseases of Children; Pathology; Infectious Diseases, including Croupous Pneumonia; Laryngology and Rhinology; Otology.
Side 162 - ... are not already provided for. The General Medical Board holds it as axiomatic that the health of the people at home must be maintained as efficiently as in times of peace. The medical service in hospitals, medical colleges and laboratories must be up to standard; the demands incident to examination of drafted soldiers, including the reclamation of men rejected because of comparatively slight physical defects ; the need of conserving the health of the families and dependents of enlisted men and...
Side 454 - A Text-Book of Obstetrics. By BARTON COOKE HIRST, MD, Professor of Obstetrics in the University of Pennsylvania. Handsome octavo, 899 pages, with 746 illustrations, 39 of them in colors.
Side 267 - There is so much bad in the best of us, And so much good in the worst of us, That it hardly behooves any of us To talk about the rest of us.
Side 270 - ... (1) Carbolic acid 1 part, alcohol 99 parts; (2) formaldehyde 1 part; alcohol 250 parts; (3) bichloride of mercury, 1 part, alcohol 2,000 parts; (4) bichloride of mercury, 0.8 gram; hydrochloric acid, 60 cc, alcohol 640...
Side 442 - The best timed and best conducted operation brings with it nothing but disgrace, if the diseased propensities of the constitution are active and powerful. It is after an operation that, in my opinion, we are most particularly incited to regulate the constitution, lest the disease should be revived or renewed by its disturbance.
Side 24 - In the first place, the remedy is to be tried on the healthy body, without any foreign substance mixed with it ; a very small dose is to be taken, and attention is to be directed to every effect produced by it ; for example, on the pulse, the temperature, the respiration, the secretions. Having obtained these obvious phenomena in health, you may then pass on to experiment on the body in a state of disease.
Side 158 - Infant Feeding.— By Clifford G. Grulee, A. M., MD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Rush Medical College, Attending Pediatrician to Cook County Hospital.
Side 729 - Great is the art, Great be the manners, of the bard. He shall not his brain encumber With the coil of rhythm and number; But, leaving rule and pale forethought, He shall aye climb For his rhyme. Pass in, pass in...
Side 151 - Convalescence. Gastric Disturbances, acute or chronic. Diphtheria. Typhoid, Scarlet, and other Fevers. Irritation or Ulceration of Intestinal Tract. Consumption and all Wasting Diseases. Cholera Infantum, and all Infantile Disorders. Influenza, and Recovery therefrom.

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