Western Lancet and Hospital Reporter, Volume 15

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Robinson & Jones, 1854 - Medicine
 

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Page 363 - The Science and Art of Surgery. Being a treatise on Surgical Injuries, Diseases and Operations. By John Erichsen, Professor of Surgery in University College, and Surgeon to the University College Hospital.
Page 615 - Healthy Skin : A Popular Treatise on the Skin and Hair, their Preservation and Management. By ERASMUS WILSON, FRS, Author of a "Treatise on Diseases of the Skin ; " A System of Human Anatomy, etc., etc. Second American, from the Fourth and revised London Edition.
Page 524 - The modern treatment of Syphilitic Diseases, both Primary and Secondary ; comprising the treatment of Constitutional and Confirmed Syphilis, by a safe and successful method ; with numerous Cases, Formula,
Page 415 - Words are things ; and a small drop of ink, Falling, like dew upon a thought, produces That which makes thousands, perhaps millions
Page 419 - A Universal Formulary : Containing the Methods of Preparing and Administering Officinal and other Medicines. The whole adapted to Physicians and Pharmaceutists. By R.
Page 535 - misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary, and kept at hard labor not more than ten, nor less than three years." Mr. Kowles for the State. Messrs Nye and
Page 247 - is more used than in the English, as well as in Turkey, where it is the principal beverage, not only the gravel but the gout, those tormentors of so many of the human race, are scarcely known.
Page 546 - under the dressings sufficiently far to reach the point of fracture. I believe you will not fail to recognize the difference in the motion between the two cases. Such, gentlemen, is the explanation which I wish to offer for the relative frequency of this very serious accident—nonunion of the humérus.
Page 302 - retina? or is it usually dilated, and does it act slowly, as though disease had deadened the sensibility of the nervous system ; or do the pupils of the two eyes not act simultaneously, but one more readily than the other? Do the pupils oscillate under the light; at first contracting, then
Page 237 - another smaller one is attached by hinges of leather, and made to lie obliquely upon the forehead ; the force of the pressure being regulated by several strings attached to its edge, which are passed through holes* in the board upon

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