The Lancet-clinic, Volume 97J.C. Culbertson, 1907 |
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Page xi
... present operative necessities for cure in tuberculous , 465 . Organization in medicine , the value of , 525 . Orphan proprietary remedies , 192 . Otitis interna , suppurative , 99 . media , brain abscess following acute , 196 ...
... present operative necessities for cure in tuberculous , 465 . Organization in medicine , the value of , 525 . Orphan proprietary remedies , 192 . Otitis interna , suppurative , 99 . media , brain abscess following acute , 196 ...
Page 11
... present to you a synop sis of what the teachers of the public schools of the city are attempting to do , to inculcate upon the minds of the children , the betterment of their physical condition by elucidating the laws of health and the ...
... present to you a synop sis of what the teachers of the public schools of the city are attempting to do , to inculcate upon the minds of the children , the betterment of their physical condition by elucidating the laws of health and the ...
Page 14
... present time be considered a relic of barbarism . All school - rooms should have ample light , and be equipped with the best slate blackboards , as poor light and poor black- boards are no doubt the cause of the origin of weak eyes upon ...
... present time be considered a relic of barbarism . All school - rooms should have ample light , and be equipped with the best slate blackboards , as poor light and poor black- boards are no doubt the cause of the origin of weak eyes upon ...
Page 37
... present at this particular moment is not so encouragingly large , but long experience in medical societies enables me to predict that the representa- tive men I see present will soon attract large numbers of their kind . Naturally ...
... present at this particular moment is not so encouragingly large , but long experience in medical societies enables me to predict that the representa- tive men I see present will soon attract large numbers of their kind . Naturally ...
Page 39
... present who do not have enough backbone to resist the present conditions , I assure you that it takes very little if you know you are right . We will win this fight if we stand together . We are not afraid of the insur- ance companies ...
... present who do not have enough backbone to resist the present conditions , I assure you that it takes very little if you know you are right . We will win this fight if we stand together . We are not afraid of the insur- ance companies ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal abscess Academy of Medicine acid acute anesthesia applied bacilli believe bladder blood body bowel Cæsarean section cause cavity cent cervix child chronic Cincinnati clinical condition cure curette death diagnosis dilated diphtheria disease doses drainage drugs dyspnea eclampsia examination experience fact fluid forceps fracture give given gland Health hemorrhage hospital hyoscine incision infection intestinal iodine Journal kidney labor lesion mastoid medi Medical Association Medical College membrane ment method milk months nerve nervous normal nose Obstetrics obstruction occur Ohio operation opsonins organ ounces ovum pain paper patient pelvic peristalsis peritoneal physician position practice pregnancy present profession prostate prostatectomy pruritus pubiotomy removed reported scarlet fever sciatica sion skin Society solution stomach surgeon Surgery surgical suture symptoms syphilis temperature tion tissue treated treatment tube tuberculosis tumor typhoid fever ulcer urine usually uterine uterus vaginal vomiting week
Popular passages
Page 130 - There is always room for a man of force, and he makes room for many. Society is a troop of thinkers, and the best heads among them take the best places. A feeble man can see the farms that are fenced and tilled, the houses that are built. The strong man sees the possible houses and farms. His eye makes estates, as fast as the sun breeds clouds.
Page 213 - Second. If it be labeled or branded so as to deceive or mislead the purchaser, or purport to be a foreign product when not so, or if the contents of the package as originally put up shall have been removed in whole or in part and other contents shall have been placed in such package, or if...
Page 151 - Some general rules should be adopted by the faculty, in every town or district, relative to pecuniary acknowledgments from their patients ; and it should be deemed a point of honor to adhere to these rules with as much uniformity as varying circumstances will admit.
Page 103 - Edited by Reuben Peterson, AB, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women in the University of Michigan, Department of Medicine and Surgery, Ann Arbor, Mich. Large Octavo, 1087 Pages, with 523 Engravings and 30 Full-Page Plates in Colors and Monochrome.
Page 151 - A wealthy physician should not give advice gratis to the affluent ; because his doing so is an injury to his professional brethren. The office of a physician can never be supported as an exclusively beneficent one ; and it is defrauding, in some degree, the common funds for its support, when fees are dispensed with which might justly be claimed.
Page 96 - All successful essays become the property of the Association. c. The medal shall be conferred and honorable mention made of the two other essays considered worthy of this distinction, at a general meeting of the Association, d.
Page 309 - AMERICAN PRACTICE OF SURGERY. A Complete System of the Science and Art of Surgery, by Representative Surgeons of the United States and Canada. Editors: Joseph D.
Page 152 - Neither a borrower nor a lender be ; For loan oft loses both itself and friend, And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.
Page 388 - A Quarterly Digest of Advances, Discoveries and Improvements in the Medical and Surgical Sciences. Edited by Hobart Amory Hare, MD, Professor of Therapeutics and Materia Medica in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia. Octavo, 280 pages, with illustrations. Per annum in four cloth-bound volumes, $9.00; in paper binding, $6.00, carriage paid to any address. Lea Brothers & Co., Publishers, Philadelphia and New York.
Page 507 - ... termination by dietary and other measures, the cessation of the use of codeine was not followed by any special distress. The effects of codeine on the alimentary canal are remarkable, in that it assuages pain as well or better than morphine, and nevertheless does not check the secretions or peristalsis notably, unless the latter is excessive, as in dysentery. The statement that codeine is simply a "little morphine...