American Druggist and Pharmaceutical Record, Volume 40American Druggist Publishing Company, 1902 |
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acid advertising alcohol alkaloids amendment AMERICAN DRUGGIST annual antitoxin avenue bill Board of Pharmacy bottles Brooklyn Buffalo capsules carbolic acid carbonate cent Charles Chemical Chicago Cincinnati cocaine College of Pharmacy color Committee containing Davis & Co demand Drug Clerks Drug Company drug store drug trade elected Elmira essential oils firm formula George give glycerin held interest January jobbers John Kings County license liquid liquor Louis macists manufacturers matter medicine meeting ment method officers organization paper pepsin Phar Pharmaceutical Association pharmacists Pharmacopoeia Pharmacy Law Philadelphia physicians poisons powder preparations prescription present President prize Prof proprietary quantity quinine quotations quoted recently Regular Correspondent Retail Druggists retina secretary sell soda fountain soda water sodium sold solution street supply suppositories syrup tion tube United vice-president week wholesale William William Muir window York
Popular passages
Page 2 - Like the vase, in which roses have once been distilled — You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will. But the scent of the roses will hang round it still.
Page 7 - The media that refract the rays of light to form the images on the retina are the cornea, the aqueous humor, the crystalline lens, and the vitreous humor.
Page 19 - ... 3. To increase facilities for higher education. 4. To increase the efficiency of the universities and other institutions of learning throughout the country, by utilizing and adding to their existing facilities and aiding teachers in the various institutions for experimental and other work, in these institutions as far as advisable.
Page 2 - It is proposed to found in the city of Washington, an institution which with the cooperation of institutions now or hereafter established, there or elsewhere, shall in the broadest and most liberal manner encourage investigation, research, and discovery — show the application of knowledge to the improvement of mankind, provide such buildings, laboratories, books, and apparatus, as may be needed; and afford instruction of an advanced character to students properly qualified to profit thereby.
Page 19 - To discover the exceptional man in every department of study whenever and wherever found, inside or outside of schools, and enable him to make the work for which he seems specially designed his life work.
Page 58 - Any person who shall by himself, his servant or agent, or as the servant or agent of any other person, leave, throw or deposit or have in his possession with intent to leave, throw or deposit upon the doorstep or premises owned or occupied by another or who shall deliver to any child under...
Page 54 - That, except as may be otherwise authorized by law, no person shall throw, cast, deposit, drop, scatter, or leave, or cause to be thrown, cast, deposited, dropped, scattered, or left, any drug, medicine, or chemical, or any compound or combination thereof, upon any public highway or place, or, without the consent of the owner or occupant thereof, upon any premises in the District of Columbia.
Page 83 - Any person, firm, or corporation, who distributes, or causes to be distributed, any free or trial samples of any medicine, drug, chemical or chemical compound, by leaving the same exposed upon the ground, sidewalk, porch, doorway, letter-boxes, or in any other manner, that children may become possessed of the same, shall be guilty of a...
Page 19 - ... enable such students as may find Washington the best point for their special studies to enjoy the advantages of the museums, libraries, laboratories, observatory, meteorological, piscicultural, and forestry schools, and kindred institutions of the several departments of the Government. 6. To ensure the prompt publication and distribution of the results of scientific investigation, a field considered highly important.
Page 24 - ... under such circumstances, the seller is not liable in damages for injuries to the purchaser resulting from the improper use or handling of the article, no matter how little knowledge the purchaser may in fact have had of its properties, or of the manner in which it could not be safely tised or handled.