The New England Medical Gazette, Volume 25

Front Cover
Medical Gazette Publishing Company, 1890
 

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 235 - A NEW MEDICAL DICTIONARY: Including all the words and phrases used in Medicine, with their proper Pronunciation and Definitions, based on Recent Medical Literature. By George M. Gould, BA, MD, Ophthalmic Surgeon to the Philadelphia Hospital, etc.
Page 557 - Wild and unwholesome as the root, Will all the branches be ; How can we hope for living fruit From such a deadly tree...
Page 288 - ... of the death, etc., of people at a distance) which are so frequently reported, are accidental coincidences, or something more. Some 8,000, or more, persons in England, France, and the United States, have already returned answers to the question which heads the census sheets, and which runs as follows : "Have you ever, when completely awake, had a vivid impression of seeing, or being touched by, a living being or inanimate...
Page 536 - The Civil, Military, and Naval Departments of the British government are supplied with the Fairchild Digestive products and the Fairchild preparations for the predigestion, of milk, etc., are especially preferred in India.
Page 571 - Experimental Researches Respecting the Relation of Dress to Pelvic Diseases of Women.
Page 438 - Lecturer on Descriptive and Regional Anatomy at the Pennsylvania School of Anatomy; Professor of Anatomy at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; member of the Association of American Anatomists, Academy of Natural Science, Academy of Surgery, College of Physicians, etc., of Pennsylvania.
Page 578 - Fourth American from the fifth English edition, thoroughly revised. With a Supplement on the Detection of Color Blindness, by WILLIAM THOMSON, MD, Professor of Ophthalmology in the Jefferson Medical College. In one 12mo. volume of 500 pages, with 164 illustrations, selections from Snellen's test-types and formulae, and a colored plate.
Page 366 - ... accumulate in the system. However, he could take dipper and ladle, and freight me up with old familiar doses that had come down from Adam to his time and mine ; and he could go out with a wheelbarrow and gather weeds and offal, and build some more, while those others were getting in their work. And if our reverend doctor came and found him there, he would be dumb with awe, and would get down and worship him.

Bibliographic information