The Hahnemannian Monthly, Volume 39LaBarre Printing Company, 1904 |
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Page 44
... regard to inducements held out to particularly prominent or skilful athletes to enter certain colleges , that they might gain for them success in the athletic world and thus attract other students . Does not this naturally set up a ...
... regard to inducements held out to particularly prominent or skilful athletes to enter certain colleges , that they might gain for them success in the athletic world and thus attract other students . Does not this naturally set up a ...
Page 45
... regard the game not only as brutal in itself , as played , but as having a degenerating , brutalizing tendency . As one of its ardent advocates lately said , " It is a fight , but a fight in which gentlemen may indulge . " With the ...
... regard the game not only as brutal in itself , as played , but as having a degenerating , brutalizing tendency . As one of its ardent advocates lately said , " It is a fight , but a fight in which gentlemen may indulge . " With the ...
Page 47
... regard to it , except to repeal laws enforcing unsanitary practices , such , especially , as vacci- nation . " In the next section the author tells us that " not only has the infectiousness of Tuberculosis and of many other diseases ...
... regard to it , except to repeal laws enforcing unsanitary practices , such , especially , as vacci- nation . " In the next section the author tells us that " not only has the infectiousness of Tuberculosis and of many other diseases ...
Page 50
... regard such stuff as interesting to any class of readers . We express our satisfaction that the culprit is not an editor of a homœopathic journal . CORRECTION OF AN ERROR . - A writer in American Medical Monthly , speaking of the ...
... regard such stuff as interesting to any class of readers . We express our satisfaction that the culprit is not an editor of a homœopathic journal . CORRECTION OF AN ERROR . - A writer in American Medical Monthly , speaking of the ...
Page 53
... regard the tabetic process not as a lesion of the posterior root axones nor of the neuroglia , but simply as a syphilitic disease of the posterior lymphatic system : a syphilitic lymphangitis . -Medical Record , November 14 , 1903 ...
... regard the tabetic process not as a lesion of the posterior root axones nor of the neuroglia , but simply as a syphilitic disease of the posterior lymphatic system : a syphilitic lymphangitis . -Medical Record , November 14 , 1903 ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal acid action acute albuminuria anæmia antitoxin appear arterial atropine attack believe bladder blood body bowels cardiac catarrh cause cavity cells cent cervical cervix child chronic clinical condition cure diagnosis diarrhoea diet digitalis dilatation disease doses drug duct eclampsia effects endocarditis endometrium especially examination exist experience fact fever frequently gall-bladder gastric give glands glaucoma gonorrhoea Gramm hæmorrhage Hahnemann heart homœopathic Hospital increased indicated infection inflammation intestinal irritation kidneys lesions materia medica matter medicine ment method milk months mucous membrane muscular nephritis nerve normal observed occur operation organs pain pathological patient peritoneum Philadelphia physician pneumonia potency practice practitioner pregnancy present produced radium remedy removed reported says scarlet fever solution stomach strychnia surgical symptoms syphilis temperature therapeutic tion tissue toxins treatment tube tuberculosis tumor typhoid typhoid fever ulcer urethra urine usually uterine uterus vomiting
Popular passages
Page 375 - The accepted definition of a homoeopathic physician is "one who adds to his knowledge of medicine a special knowledge of homoeopathic therapeutics and observes the law of similia. All that pertains to the great field of medical learning is his by tradition, by inheritance, by right.
Page 15 - AN AMERICAN TEXT-BOOK OF LEGAL MEDICINE AND TOXICOLOGY. Edited by FREDERICK PETERSON, MD, Chief of Clinic, Nervous Department, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York ; and WALTER S. HAINES, MD, Professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy, and Toxicology, Rush Medical College, Chicago.
Page 6 - Progressive Medicine: A Quarterly Digest of Advances, Discoveries and Improvements in the Medical and Surgical Sciences. Edited by Hobart...
Page 4 - The student sees the actual conditions as they exist in fractured bones, and is encouraged to determine for himself how to meet the conditions found in each individual case. Methods of treatment are described in minute detail, and the reader is not only told, but is shown how to apply apparatus, for as far as possible, all the details are illustrated. This elaborate and complete series of illustrations constitutes a feature of the book. There are 688 of them, all from new and original drawings and...
Page 5 - A REFERENCE HANDBOOK OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES EMBRACING THE ENTIRE RANGE OF SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL MEDICINE AND ALLIED SCIENCE. By various writers.
Page 3 - Treatment of Fractures WITH NOTES ON DISLOCATIONS The Treatment of Fractures: with Notes on a few Common Dislocations. By CHARLES L. SCUDDER, MD, Surgeon to the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. Octavo of 628 pages, with 854 original illustrations.
Page 16 - Evidence" not only is advice given to medical experts, but suggestions are also made to attorneys as to the best methods of obtaining the desired information from the witness. The Bertillon and Green leaf -Smart systems of identification are concisely and intelligently described, and the advantages of each stated.
Page 567 - It is a curious fact that while most of the States of the Union have laws for the regulation of medical practice, there does not exist an authoritative legal definition of medicine. Perhaps, as satisfying a definition of it as does exist, is to be found in the Standard Dictionary, in the phrase which defined it as "The healing art ; the science of the preservation of health ; and of treating disease for the purpose of cure.
Page 166 - If a dose of poison is swallowed through mistake and the patient dies, even though physician and patient are expecting favorable results, does belief, you ask, cause this death? Even so, and as directly as if the poison had been intentionally taken. In such cases a few persons believe the potion swallowed by the patient to be harmless; but the vast majority of mankind, though they know nothing of this particular case and this special person, believe the arsenic, the strychnine, or whatever the drug...
Page 166 - ... ask, cause this death? Even so, and as directly as if the poison had been intentionally taken. In such cases a few persons believe the potion swallowed by the patient to be harmless ; but the vast majority of mankind, though they know nothing of this particular case and this special person, believe the arsenic, the strychnine, or whatever the drug used, to be poisonous, for it has been set down as a poison by mortal mind. The consequence is that the result is controlled by the majority of opinions...