The Story of Drugs: A Popular Exposition of Their Origin, Preparation and Commercial ImportanceCentury Company, 1922 - 358 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 8
... passing , that numerically by far the larger propor- tion of all crude drugs and active principles used in medicine belong to this order . ) Some though by no means all of these are the " coal - tar derivatives " to which reference has ...
... passing , that numerically by far the larger propor- tion of all crude drugs and active principles used in medicine belong to this order . ) Some though by no means all of these are the " coal - tar derivatives " to which reference has ...
Page 33
... passing mention of all these great names . There are many others who deserve recognition , and we should not omit the Schieffelins ; McKesson and Rob- bins of New York ; and the Burrough Brothers of Baltimore . While prior to 1850 the ...
... passing mention of all these great names . There are many others who deserve recognition , and we should not omit the Schieffelins ; McKesson and Rob- bins of New York ; and the Burrough Brothers of Baltimore . While prior to 1850 the ...
Page 36
... passing on to the discussion of another im- portant element in the field of medicine manufactur- ing , reference must be made to the phenomenal growth of an idea that is strictly a twentieth - century proposi- tion . Less than twenty ...
... passing on to the discussion of another im- portant element in the field of medicine manufactur- ing , reference must be made to the phenomenal growth of an idea that is strictly a twentieth - century proposi- tion . Less than twenty ...
Page 42
... passing , to a unique branch of the medicine industry which had its origin in Winona , Minnesota . It is known as the " wagon trade , " and is conducted by a dozen or more firms scattered through the central United States . They make ...
... passing , to a unique branch of the medicine industry which had its origin in Winona , Minnesota . It is known as the " wagon trade , " and is conducted by a dozen or more firms scattered through the central United States . They make ...
Page 47
... passed through a grinding - mill in which it is reduced to a coarse powder . If pulverized too finely it will clog the percolator and prevent a steady flow of the liquid . The ground drug is then trans- ferred to a macerating - machine ...
... passed through a grinding - mill in which it is reduced to a coarse powder . If pulverized too finely it will clog the percolator and prevent a steady flow of the liquid . The ground drug is then trans- ferred to a macerating - machine ...
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The Story of Drugs: A Popular Exposition of Their Origin, Preparation and ... Henry C. Fuller No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
acetanilid acid addicts alkaloids antiseptic antitoxin belladonna beverage body boric acid caffein camphor cannabis capsules cascara cause character chemical chemist coca cocain color compounds contain creams crop crude drugs cultivation cure denatured alcohol depend diet digitalis disease dissolved distillation dope drug trade druggist drugs and medicines effect employed established ethyl alcohol feature fermentation firms fluid extracts Food and Drugs formulas fusel oil ginseng glycerin golden-seal hay fever henbane important individual industry infection ingredients known liquid manufacturing ment mixture morphin mosquito narcotic nature obtained operations opium pellagra percolator perfume pharmaceutical pharmacy phenacetin physician pills plant pollen popular powders preparations present proprietary pure quantities quinin relieve remedial agents requires root salicylic salts santonin serum soap soluble solution species strychnin substances supplies syrup tablets tion to-day tonic toxin treatment usually vaccine vegetable vitamines yeast
Popular passages
Page 255 - Sometimes 25 per cent or more of them are found to be infected. In malarious localities the anopheline mosquitoes bite the healthy new-born children and infect many of them. Such children if not thoroughly treated may remain infected for years. They may become anemic and possess enlarged spleens, and of course may spread the infection to others. In malarious localities almost every child has been found to contain the parasites of malaria or to possess an enlarged spleen. In such a locality, therefore,...
Page 234 - The committee is of the opinion that the total number of addicts in this country probably exceeds one million at the present time," and further says that "the range of ages of addicts was reported as twelve to seventy-five years.
Page 234 - ... per cent of the population. On this basis there would be 1,908,000 addicts in the United States. Information in the hands of the committee indicates that drug addiction is less prevalent in rural communities than in cities or in congested centers. It would, therefore, be unfair to estimate the number of addicts in the entire country on the basis of the figures obtained for New York City. Furthermore, it is the opinion of the committee that an estimate based on the number of addicts in a small...
Page 146 - ... for rheumatism ; lobelia for coughs and colds ; wild sage tea, golden-seal, flowering dogwood, and prickly-ash berries for fevers; elder, wild cherry, and sumac for colds and quinsies; wild ginger, ginseng, and euphorbia for digestive disorders; inhalations of penny-royal for headache; sassafras or violet leaves for wounds and felons; and the roots of sassafras and sarsaparilla for "cooling and purifying the blood.
Page 254 - The parasite now undergoes certain changes in the mosquito's stomach. It passes through the stomach wall and finally affixes itself to its outer surface. Here it grows very considerably and, after a week under favorable conditions, produces a large number of spores. These spores, thus entering the general body cavity of the mosquito, find their way in.to the salivary glands. These glands secrete the irritating fluid injected under the human skin when the mosquito begins to feed. Thus, when one of...
Page 234 - ... received to the questionnaires sent out. With respect to this phase of the subject, the committee finds that addicts may be divided into two classes, namely, the class composed principally of addicts of the underworld and the class which is made up almost entirely of addicts in good social standing. The addict of the underworld, in a large majority of cases, acquires the habit of using these drugs through his or her associates. This is probably due to the fact that addicts of this class make...
Page 133 - If the preparation contains alcohol, it must be sufficiently medicated to prevent its use as an intoxicating beverage, and in addition to this requirement, the proportion of alcohol present must not be greater than is properly necessary to hold in solution in permanently active condition the essential constituents of the preparation, and to protect the preparation against freezing, fermentation, or other deleterious change.
Page 253 - It would appear from what we know of the life history and habits of the common house fly that it is perfectly feasible for cities and towns to reduce the numbers of these annoying and dangerous insects so greatly as to render them of comparatively slight account.
Page 260 - ... individual and community efforts to destroy rats will give satisfactory and lasting results. The program may be regarded by many as too expensive. Will it be too costly ? What do rats cost now ? If half the money now spent in feeding and fighting rats could be expended in wisely planned and wellexecuted cooperative efforts for rat repression, it would be possible within a few years nearly to rid the country of its worst animal pest, to reduce losses from its depredations by at least 90 per cent,...
Page 106 - The production of drugs of high quality requires skilled management, experience in special methods of plant culture, acquaintance with trade requirements, and a knowledge of the influence of time of collection and manner of preparation on the constituents of the drug which determine its value. Small quantities of drugs produced without regard to these conditions are apt to be poor in quality and so unattractive to dealers and manufacturers that the products will not be salable at a price sufficient...