INDEX Aaron, Chas. D., M. D., 81. Abdominal Section, Immediate Mortality in, 253. Accessory Sinus Disease, Some Cases of Uveitus Acme Triturator, 213. Additions to staff of Detroit College of Medicine, Agglutination Test, Defects of the, 61. Alumni Clinic Week, 60.; American Climatological Society, 94. American Journal of Tuberculosis, 167. Amoebic Dysentery, 127. Aneurysm from Bullet Wound, 162. Ankylosis of the Wrist, Treatment of Gonorrheal, Announcement of change of volume, 311. Annual Address, Wayne County Medical Soc., 243. Anus, Congenital, Partial Atresia of, 160. Anzinger, Dr. F. P.. 191. Apoplexy, The Prevention of, 250. Appendicitis, 123. And Progress, 24. Mortality of, 139. Appendix, Nail in, 239. Ascariasis and Typhoid Fever, 191. Association of Military Surgeons, 205. 207, 242. Atresia, of the Anus, Congenital, Partial, 160. Beaumont, Wm., Inferences of, Concerning Gastric Behring, Emil Adolph, 148. Biddle, Dr. Andrew P., 312. Bilateral Hysterical Amaurosis, 64. Biliary Colic, 93. Bladder Neoplasms, primary, 308. Blodgett, Dr. Wm. E., 13.' Blood Pressure in Disease, 63. Bloodless Hip Operation, 66. Book Reviews, 33, 69, 105, 142, 179, 215, 258, 290, 322. Border Line Between Ophthalmology and General Breisacher, Dr. L, 276. Breslau and Its Surgical Clinic, 209. Brown, Philip King, M. D., 73. Bunion Shield, 256. Cabot, Dr. Richard C., 6, 73. Cancer, 320. Cancer of the Bowels; resection of over 3 feet of Cancer and Sarcoma, Final Results in the X-Ray Capsule Forceps, 67. Carcinoma of Cervix Uteri, Inoperable except as a palliative treatment, 229. Carpal Scaphoid and Semilunar, 175. Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis, 30. Chemistry of Digestion, 81. Cholecystectomy, 160. Cholecystitis and Chronic Pancreatitis, 160. Colonic Dilator, 256. Complete Inversion and Prolapse of the Uterus, 21. Cotton Reservoir and Waste Box, 214. County Health Officers, Should We Have, 48. Cystic Duct, Obstruction of, 158. Cystic Ovaries, 237. Cystocele, Lacerated Perineum with, 238. Damp Detector, 142. Deaths, 28, 61, 171, 249, 290. Defects of the Agglutination Test, 61. Dermoid Cyst of the Ovary, Without Adhesions, 90, 123. Detroit Academy of Medicine, 22, 54, 287, 313. Diabetes, Etiology of, 150. Dickerson, Dr. Spenser C., 150. Dickinson, Dr. Wm. L., 120. Diabetes Insipidus, 155, 166. Digestion, Chemistry of, 81. Digestive Disturbances, Gall-Stone Disease and, 276. Of Gall-Stone Disease, 104. Of Pneumonía, X-Ray in, 255. Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of the Dionin, 29. Diphtheritic Serum, Local Action of, 251. Douche Point, Expanding, 178. Duty of the State in the Care of Crippled and De- Dysmenorrhoea, 91. Education in the United States, Medical, 255. Effect of Tobacco, 254. Electrotherm, 67. Endocarditis, 226. Epilepsy, Prognosis of, 30. Treatment of, 252. Eternal Anti-Vaccinationists, 242. Ether and Chloroform Dropper, 68. Exomphalos, 209. Exophthalmos, Pulsating, 20. Experience with staining the skin with argyrol, 19 Fallopian Tube, Primary Carcinoma of the, 1. Perforating Distal End of Appendix, 229. Fechheimer, Dr., M. A., 155. Feeding Hungry School Children, 175. Heart Massage, Resuscitation by, 252. Hemorrhagic Pancreatitis, 226. Hospitals for Small Cities, 25. Hygiene, Individual Factor in, 73. Progress of School, 109. Hysterectomy, Abdominal, 126. Last Resort, to Relieve Local Pain and Reflex On the Sexual Function, The Effect of, 103 . "Imprisonment at Hard Labor and Typhoid Individual Factor in Hygiene, 73. Inferences of Wm. Beaumont Concerning Gastric Instruction in Hygiene at West Point, 311. International Medical Congress, 172. Jennings, Dr. Charles Godwin, 109. Lacerated Perineum with Cystocele, 238. Leucocytosis in Purulent Affections, 193. Ligation of Carotid, Successful, 20. Local Action of Diphtheritic Serum, 251. Local Anesthetic, The Use of Sterile Water as a, 118. Naval War, '04-05, Notes on Experiences During the Neglected Perforating Appendicitis, 230. New Devices Exhibited Before the Association of New Instruments and Devices, 31, 67, 141, 171, 213, 256. New Names in the Pharmacopoeia, 241. Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine, Recip- Nobel, Alfred Bernard, (photograph), 183. Notes on Experiences During the Russo-Japan- ese Naval War, 1904-1905, 261. Obstetric and Surgical Bag, 141. Obstruction of Cystic Duct, 158. Operative treatment of Myopia, 310. Osler's Farewell Address, 174. Our duty to the child from a dental standpoint, 319. Pancreatitis, Cholecystitis and Chronic, 160. Pawlow Ivan Petrovitch, (Pavloff), 186. Peritonitis, Gonorrhoeal, 198. Personal Experience in the Employment of Me- chanical Vibration in the Treatment of Rectal 162305 One of the first things that strikes the eye on entering the Hackley Hospital is a brass tablet bearing this inscription, "Established May 28th, 1902, by Charles H. Hackley, for the relief and cure of the sick and suffering, and for the promotion of Medical Science." The fact that one of the prime objects of this magnificent institution is the furtherance of medical knowledge makes it of especial interest to physicians. While broad in its charity and true to its purpose to relieve the sick and suffering, it does not seek to do so at the expense of the physician, as so many of these charities do, but has manifest the most liberal policy toward the profession from the start. Two of the nine trustees are physicians. The staff embraces practically every doctor of medicine in the city, the purpose being that all shall share its advantages and grow with its growth. Such an institution as this the profession of Muskegon has long desired, and when Mr. Hackley announced in the spring of 1902 that he would build and equip a hospital, the physicians of the city went to him in a body to express their gratitude and to pledge their support. His unstinted liberality to Muskegon in the way of manual training school, library, parks and monuments, to which he had given over one and a quarter million of dollars, led us to expect much and we have not been disappointed. Beside the endowment of $100,000.00, the hospital and grounds have cost over $200,000.00. Having determined the size of institution demanded by a city of Muskegon's population, the only restriction placed upon the trustees has been, "get the best of everything." Hackley Hospital is built on the pavilion plan, there being really four buildings in one. It occupies four city blocks, thus giving ample room for expansion and providing recreation and breathing place for convalescents. It has an extreme length from east to west of two hundred and four feet, and is composed of a central administration building which faces the north and connected on either side by wide corridors are the east and west pavilions which are devoted to wards and private rooms for patients. Back of the administration building is the service building in which are the kitchen, dining rooms for help, the laundry, and the power, heating and lighting plant. The buildings are constructed of the best material and are as nearly fire proof as modern construction can make them. The outside walls are of red pressed brick with foundation and trimmings of Bedford stone. The roof is a red tile. The building is so placed that every room has sunshine. at some hour of the day. As one enters the administration building he is ushered into a spacious Detroit, Mich., April 15, 1905. VOL. 5, NO. 1. |