Glasgow Medical Journal

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A. Macdougall, 1890
 

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Page 213 - And further, by these, my son, be admonished : of making many books there is no end ; and much study is a weariness of the flesh.
Page 137 - Spinal Concussion. SURGICALLY CONSIDERED AS A CAUSE OF SPINAL INJURY, AND NEUROLOGICALLY RESTRICTED TO A CERTAIN SYMPTOM GROUP, FOR WHICH is SUGGESTED THE DESIGNATION ERICHSEN'S DISEASE, AS ONE FORM OF THE TRAUMATIC NEUROSES. By SV CLEVENGER, MD, Consulting Physician Reese and Alexian Hospitals; Late Pathologist County Insane Asylum, Chicago...
Page 386 - Medical student will be bound to obtain a- licence, is to be composed of representatives of the three corporations, the Royal College of Physicians, the Royal College of Surgeons, and the...
Page 143 - Treatise on the Diseases of Women, FOR THE USE OF STUDENTS AND PRACTITIONERS. BY ALEXANDER JC SKENE, MD, PROFESSOR OF GYNAECOLOGY IN THE LONG ISLAND COLLEGE HOSPITAL, BROOKLYN, NY ; FORMERLY PROFESSOR OF GYN-tCOLOGY IN THE NEW YORK POST-GRADUATE MEDICAL SCHOOL AND HOSPITAL, ETC.
Page 290 - Mr. X., forty-one years old, seats himself on a chair. I tell him that he must try to sleep. "Think of nothing but that you are to go to sleep." After some seconds I continue : "Now your eyelids are beginning to close ; your eyes are growing more and more fatigued ; the lids quiver more and more. ' You feel tired all over ; your arms go to sleep ; your legs grow tired ; a feeling of heaviness and the desire for sleep take possession of your whole body.
Page 58 - A PRACTICAL TEXTBOOK OF THE DISEASES OF WOMEN. By ARTHUR HN LEWERS, MD Lond., Obstetric Physician to the London Hospital.
Page 62 - REPORTS from the LABORATORY of the ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, EDINBURGH. Edited by J. BATTY TUKE, MD, G. SIMS WOODHEAD, MD, and D. NOEL PATON, MD VOLUME FIRST, Svo, Cloth, pp.
Page 124 - Alvarenga, of Lisbon, has been awarded to Dr. RW Philip, of the Victoria Dispensary for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest, Edinburgh, for his Essay on Pulmonary Tuberculosis, which will be published by the College.
Page 297 - In the church the ordinary habilaments of the leper were removed ; he was clothed in a funeral pall ; and while placed before the altar, between two trestles, the Libera was sung, and the mass for the dead celebrated over him. After this service he was again sprinkled with holy water, and led from the church to the house or hospital destined for his future abode.
Page 290 - Now you hear the concert ? " " Certainly." Upon this I take a black cloth and put it into his hand. " You feel this dog quite plainly ? " " Quite plainly." " Now you can open your eyes. You will see the dog clearly. Then you will go to sleep again, and not wake till I tell you." (He opens his eyes, looks at the imaginary dog and strokes it.) I take the cloth out of his hand, and lay it on the floor. (He stands up and reaches out for it.) Although he is in my room, when I tell him that he is in the...

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