Railway Surgical Journal, Volume 15

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1909

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Page 51 - No one shall work for money, No one shall work for fame, But each for the joy of the working And each in his separate Star Shall draw the things as he sees it, For the God of things as they are.
Page 45 - Borderland Studies," Miscellaneous Addresses and Essays Pertaining to Medicine and the Medical Profession, and their Relations to General Science and Thought, Volume II, by George M. Gould, MD, Formerly Editor of "The Medical News," "The Philadelphia Medical Journal," "American Medicine," Author of a Series of Medical Dictionaries, "Biographic Clinics," "Concerning Lafcadio Hearn," "Righthandedness,
Page 309 - A Text-Book of General Bacteriology." By Edwin O. Jordan, Ph. D., Professor of Bacteriology in the University of Chicago and in Rush Medical College. Octavo, 557 pages, illustrated. Philadelphia and London : WB Saunders Company, 1908.
Page 261 - Keen, MD, LL. D., Hon. FRCS, Eng. and Edin., Emeritus Professor of the Principles of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery, Jefferson Medical College.
Page 459 - by Howard A. Kelly, MD, Professor of Gynecologic Surgery at Johns Hopkins University; and Charles P. Noble. MD, Clinical Professor of Gynecology at the Woman's Medical College. Philadelphia.
Page 216 - A Text-Book of Operative Surgery." Covering the Surgical Anatomy and Operative Tcchnic Involved in the Operations of General Surgery. Written for Students and Practitioners. By Warren Stone Bickham, Phar. M.. MD, Visiting Surgeon to Charity and Touro Hospitals,
Page 51 - the things as he sees it, For the God of things as they are.
Page 6 - ACCURACY IN THERAPEUTICS. The efficiency of a medicinal agent cannot be determined by mere physical appearance. Two specimens of fluid extract of digitalis, for example, may look precisely alike. One, upon administration, may exhibit a wholly satisfactory therapeutic action ; the other, given under precisely the same conditions, may prove to be practically inert. Lack of
Page 215 - A Manual of Diseases of the Nose, Throat, and Ear." By E. Baldwin Gleason, MD, Clinical Professor of Otology at the Médico-Chirurgical College, Philadelphia. I2mo,
Page 4 - found that by giving these children a carbohydrate diet in the form of barley or rice water I rarely had a rise in temperature. With this observation in mind and remembering the results found in my autopsies following typhoid, I came to the conclusion that milk as a diet in typhoid

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