A Manual of medical jurisprudence and toxicologyW.B. Saunders, 1896 - 238 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 48
Page 29
... women dying in childbirth , putrefy rapidly , probably on account of the amount of fluid present in the body under such circum- stances . The bodies of persons dying from exhaustive diseases , such as typhus fever , or from injuries ...
... women dying in childbirth , putrefy rapidly , probably on account of the amount of fluid present in the body under such circum- stances . The bodies of persons dying from exhaustive diseases , such as typhus fever , or from injuries ...
Page 88
... women float sooner than those of men . Though a matter of importance , it is often impossible to state positively , in the case of a body floating in the water supposed to have been drowned , the length of time that has elapsed since ...
... women float sooner than those of men . Though a matter of importance , it is often impossible to state positively , in the case of a body floating in the water supposed to have been drowned , the length of time that has elapsed since ...
Page 97
... woman forcibly and against her will . At one time the punishment for rape was death , castration , fine , or im ... women , children being in- capable of offering much resistance , even when old enough to realize the nature and ...
... woman forcibly and against her will . At one time the punishment for rape was death , castration , fine , or im ... women , children being in- capable of offering much resistance , even when old enough to realize the nature and ...
Page 98
... woman in a state of stupor has been subjected to rape would not be an excuse for the act ; neither would submission from fear nor from ignorance of the nature of the crime . Further , even if the character of the woman was notoriously ...
... woman in a state of stupor has been subjected to rape would not be an excuse for the act ; neither would submission from fear nor from ignorance of the nature of the crime . Further , even if the character of the woman was notoriously ...
Page 99
Henry Cadwalader Chapman. etc. , on both the person of the woman and of the accused , spermatic and blood - stains on ... women . Indeed , the absence of any such marks of violence would be strong proof of the charge of rape made being a ...
Henry Cadwalader Chapman. etc. , on both the person of the woman and of the accused , spermatic and blood - stains on ... women . Indeed , the absence of any such marks of violence would be strong proof of the charge of rape made being a ...
Common terms and phrases
abdomen abortion acid alkaloid American Text-Book ammonia Anatomy arsenic arsenious oxide asphyxia become blood body brain burned cause of death child circumstances Clinical Cloth color committed copper coroner's corpus luteum corpuscles crime Crown 8vo deceased Diseases edition embryo emetic ESSENTIALS fact foetus frequently gestation heart homicidal Hospital hydrochloric acid illustrations important inches infant inflammation insanity interleaved for notes intestines Jefferson Medical College latter liver lungs mania MANUAL medical examiner Medical Jurisprudence Medicine medico-legal mentioned month morphia mucous membrane murder nitric acid Obstetrics opium oxalic acid patient person Philadelphia physician placenta poisoning post-mortem appearances post-mortem examination practice practitioner precipitate pregnancy present Price Professor proved fatal prussic acid putrefaction rape rigor mortis Saunders sexual intercourse skin solution spermatozoa stains stomach strychnia student suicide sulphate Surgery Surgical symptoms throat tion umbilical unfrequently urine uterus vomiting Wharton and Stillé woman wounds
Popular passages
Page 258 - Forming one handsome royal-octavo volume of 1250 pages (10x7 inches), with 500 wood-cuts in text, and 37 colored and half-tone plates, many of them engraved from original photographs and drawings furnished by the authors.
Page 2 - THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF MEDICINE. By American Teachers. Edited by WILLIAM PEPPER, MD, LL.D., Provost and Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the University of Pennsylvania.