What people are saying - Write a reviewUser Review - Flag as inappropriate After readig this book I asked myself the following: Other editions - View allCommon terms and phrasesaccurate filling acid action acute American Medical Association antiseptic applied atropine blood BOVININE cancer cause cent Chinosol chronic clinical College Conn cough cubic centimeters cure diagnosis digestive disease doses drug eczema effect especially examination F. A. DAVIS COMPANY fever formaldehyde gastric given glands gonorrhoea grains Hospital indifferent regarding injections intestinal irritation Journal lesions LITHIA WATER liver Materia Medica Medical Publishers Medicine Medico-Chirurgical ment method milk nasal Nervous normal Octavo operation opsonic opsonic index Opsonins pain Pathology patient peristalsis peritoneum Petersburg Philadelphia physician can afford poisoning practice practitioner preparation prescription Professor regarding the accurate remedy rheumatism salicylic salicylic acid Sanitarium Scarlet Fever School serum Sheldon School Signa skin sodium solution sterile stimulant stomach strychnine Surgeon Surgery Surgical symptoms syphilis Syrup text-book therapeutic tion tissue Tonic treated treatment tuberculosis ulcer urethra urine uterus Popular passagesPage 75 - A Text-Book of the Practice of Medicine. By JAMES M. ANDERS, MD, PH. D., LL. D., Professor of the Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine, Medico-Chirurgical College, Philadelphia. Page 40 - ... rather than upon any specific line of treatment. Most cases will improve by being made to rest in bed and encouraging skin and kidney action, with possibly minute doses of blue pill or calomel. Page 38 - The Practitioner's Visiting List for 1912. An invaluable pocket-sized book containing memoranda and data important for every physician, and ruled blanks for recording every detail of practice. The Weekly, Monthly and 30-Patient Perpetual contain 32 pages of data and 160 pages of classified blanks. Page 153 - The right is reserved to award no prize if in the judgment of the committee no contribution is offered of sufficient merit to warrant such action. Memoirs designed for consideration should be addressed to either "The Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, USA, Page 37 - Professor of the Principles of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, etc. Page 180 - Senna," so that its full title now is "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna." it is the same pleasant, gentle laxative, however, which for many years past physicians have entrusted to domestic use because of its non-irritant and nondebilitating character, its wide range of usefulness and its freedom from every objectionable quality. It is well and generally known that the component parts of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna are as follows : Syrup of California Figs ............. ................ 75... Page 169 - It stimulates liver, tones intestinal glands, purifies alimentary tract, improves digestion, assimilation and metabolism. Especially valuable In rheumatism, gout, bilious attacks, constipation. Most efficient In eliminating toxic products from intestinal tract or blood, ajid correcting vicious or Impaired functions. Page 80 - DILATES and FLUSHES the vaginal passage with a volume of whirling fluid, which smooths out the folds and permits the injection to come in contact with its entire surface, instantly dissolving and washing out all secretions and discharges. Page 80 - HEPATICA. The original effervescing saline laxative and uric acid solvent. A combination of the tonic, alterative, and laxative salts similar to the celebrated Bitter Waters of Europe, fortified by addition of lithium and sodium phosphates. Page 30 - Article 27, it is provided that "the signatory powers whose legislation should not now be adequate, engage to take or recommend to their legislatures such measures as may be necessary to prevent the use by private persons or by societies other than those... Bibliographic information |