Medical Life, Volume 33Medical Life Company, 1926 |
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Page 38
... showed in many wounds , notably in shot wounds of the brain . My large experience in passing delicate whale bone guides through tight deep strictures of the urethra , gave me con- fidence in the delicacy and facility of my touch when it ...
... showed in many wounds , notably in shot wounds of the brain . My large experience in passing delicate whale bone guides through tight deep strictures of the urethra , gave me con- fidence in the delicacy and facility of my touch when it ...
Page 83
... showed that there were 28 graduate students and research fellows working at six of the American colleges of pharmacy , and the 1925 census of pharmaceutical research gave the names of 239 research workers who may be class- ified as ...
... showed that there were 28 graduate students and research fellows working at six of the American colleges of pharmacy , and the 1925 census of pharmaceutical research gave the names of 239 research workers who may be class- ified as ...
Page 130
... showed that the deflection was due to currents of electricity produced in the disk by its motion , and actually drew off and measured these currents . In January 1823 he published his memorable demonstra- tion of " The Identity of the ...
... showed that the deflection was due to currents of electricity produced in the disk by its motion , and actually drew off and measured these currents . In January 1823 he published his memorable demonstra- tion of " The Identity of the ...
Page 131
... showed an astonishingly keen insight into fundamentals , and a most accurate tendency to keep objective phenomena in their places , instead of uncon- sciously twisting them to fit his theories . Theories played a small part in his life ...
... showed an astonishingly keen insight into fundamentals , and a most accurate tendency to keep objective phenomena in their places , instead of uncon- sciously twisting them to fit his theories . Theories played a small part in his life ...
Page 150
... showed the sources of errors which must be avoided , if we are to progress from a description of nature to its correct interpretation . He recognized the importance of the conclusion from analogy , which sometimes , as by a flash of ...
... showed the sources of errors which must be avoided , if we are to progress from a description of nature to its correct interpretation . He recognized the importance of the conclusion from analogy , which sometimes , as by a flash of ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid American Stomatological anatomy apothecary applied arteries ARTURO CASTIGLIONI Asgis Association Bacon baths Bazin became Bellevue Hospital blood body cancer cardiology Castiglioni cause century chemistry City clinical College of Pharmacy cure dental dentistry dentists dermatology described diagnosis digitalis discovery disease doctor drugs early eczema experiments fact father favus fever forceps Galen Germany heart Hebra heliotherapy HENRY E Hippocrates Hospital human hydrotherapy Hygiene important infant institution interest Jacobi John Laennec later Leipzig lesions lived Louis Max Kahn medical history MEDICAL JOURNAL Medical School ment method milk modern nature NUMBER observed operation organized Paris pathology patient Pediatrics Pharmaceutical pharmacists Pharmacy Philadelphia physician practice present profession Professor public health published Saint Louis Hospital scabies scientific skin Society stoma stomatology stones Sudhoff surgeon surgery syphilis theory therapeutic tion tissue treatment tuberculosis tumors University veins VICTOR ROBINSON Vienna York
Popular passages
Page 88 - An act for preventing the manufacture, sale, or transportation of adulterated or misbranded, or poisonous, or deleterious foods, drugs, medicines, and liquors, and for regulating traffic therein, and for other purposes...
Page 271 - I live in a constant endeavour to fence against the infirmities of ill health, and other evils of life, by mirth; being firmly persuaded that every time a man smiles, - but much more so, when he laughs, it adds something to this Fragment of Life.
Page 179 - One that looked like a student said grace ; a page put a laced bib under Sancho's chin, and another, who did the office of sewer, set a dish of fruit before him.* But he had hardly put one bit into his mouth, before the physician touched the dish with his wand, and then it was taken away by a page in an instant. Immediately another, with meat, was clapped in the place ; but Sancho no sooner offered to taste it, than the doctor, with the wand, conjured it away as fast as the fruit. Sancho was...
Page 352 - The elementary parts of all tissues are formed of cells in an analogous, though very diversified manner, so that it may be asserted, that there is one universal principle of development for the elementary parts of organisms, however different, and that this principle is the formation of cells.
Page 156 - The first is the discontinuance of the ancient and serious diligence of Hippocrates, which used to set down a narrative of the special cases of his patients, and how they proceeded, and how they were judged by recovery or death.
Page 181 - far be such an ill thought from us; no diet in the world yields worse nutriment than those mish-mashes do. No, leave that luxurious compound to your rich monks and prebendaries, your masters of colleges, and lusty feeders at country weddings; but let them not encumber the tables of governors, where nothing but delicate, unmixed viands, in their prime, ought to make their appearance. The reason is, that simple medicines are generally allowed to be better than compounds; for, in a composition, there...
Page 279 - The conclusions, therefore, are that the American natives represent in the main a single stem or strain of people, one homotype; that this stem is the same as that of the yellow-brown races of Asia and Polynesia; and that the main immigration of the Americans has taken place gradually by the northwestern route, in the Holocene period, and after man had reached a relatively high stage of development and multiple racial differentiation.
Page 420 - Pipe, whose bore was one sixth of an inch in diameter; and to that, by means of another brass Pipe which was fitly adapted to it, I fixed a glass Tube, of nearly the same diameter, which was nine feet in Length: Then untying the Ligature on the Artery, the blood rose in the Tube eight feet three inches perpendicular above the level of the left Ventricle of the heart...
Page 181 - I'll get me a good cudgel, and, beginning with your carcase, will so belabour and rib-roast all the physic-mongers in the island, that I will not leave therein one of the tribe of those, I mean, that are ignorant quacks ; for, as for learned and wise physicians, I will make much of them, and honour them like so many angels.
Page 181 - I will make much of them, and honour them like so many angels. Once more, Pedro Rezio, I say, get out of my presence. Avaunt ! or I will take the chair I sit upon, and comb your head with it to some purpose, and let me be called to an account about it when I give up my office ; I do not care, I will clear myself by saying, I did the world good service, in ridding it of a bad physician, the plague of a commonwealth.