The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Volumes 27-28Cupples, Upham & Company, 1843 - Medicine |
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Page 11
... dream , and , of course , that they are disqualified for giving or receiving much pleasure with a female . Another sad reflection , at least Gonorrhea Dormientium . 11 to her death, discharged her urine involuntarily. This ...
... dream , and , of course , that they are disqualified for giving or receiving much pleasure with a female . Another sad reflection , at least Gonorrhea Dormientium . 11 to her death, discharged her urine involuntarily. This ...
Page 21
... course of Lectures , $ 50 . Students who have attended two full courses of lec- tures at any incorporated school of medicine , will be required to pay $ 10 . Graduation fee , $ 18 . Board , from $ 1,50 to $ 2,00 per week . Students who ...
... course of Lectures , $ 50 . Students who have attended two full courses of lec- tures at any incorporated school of medicine , will be required to pay $ 10 . Graduation fee , $ 18 . Board , from $ 1,50 to $ 2,00 per week . Students who ...
Page 22
... course are $ 50 . The spring term offers the following advantages to the student of medicine : 1st . He may annually attend a course of seven instead of four months . 2d . If he graduate at the close of the winter term , he will be ...
... course are $ 50 . The spring term offers the following advantages to the student of medicine : 1st . He may annually attend a course of seven instead of four months . 2d . If he graduate at the close of the winter term , he will be ...
Page 24
... Course , $ 5 . Winter Course of Dissections and Lectures on Anatomy . - The Winter Course of Dissections and Lectures on Anatomy will commence on Tuesday Evening , 1st of November , at 7 o'clock ; the Lec- tures will be delivered three ...
... Course , $ 5 . Winter Course of Dissections and Lectures on Anatomy . - The Winter Course of Dissections and Lectures on Anatomy will commence on Tuesday Evening , 1st of November , at 7 o'clock ; the Lec- tures will be delivered three ...
Page 26
... COURSE OF LECTURES , AT THE MARINE HOSPITAL , QUEBEC . THE situation of Quebec - the great amount of shipping which its harbor contains during the sum- mer season - the number of emigrants , seamen and strangers , which during that ...
... COURSE OF LECTURES , AT THE MARINE HOSPITAL , QUEBEC . THE situation of Quebec - the great amount of shipping which its harbor contains during the sum- mer season - the number of emigrants , seamen and strangers , which during that ...
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abdomen acid Anatomy animals appearance applied arteries attended bath blood body bone Boston Medical bowels brain calomel cause cavity character Chemistry child Clinical cold color commenced continued costive course cranium cure discharge disease doses dura mater effect erysipelas examination excitement external fact Faculty favorable fever forceps frequently head homeopathy Hospital inches inflammation insane institution instruments integuments irritation labor Lectures limb lungs Massachusetts General Hospital Materia Medica Medical and Surgical Medical College medicine membrane months morbid muscles nature Number of deaths observation Obstetrics occipital ridge operation organs pain parietal parietal bones pathological patient persons Philadelphia phrenology physician portion practice practitioners present produced profession Professor pulse remarks remedy removed scarlet fever scrofulous skin stomach strabismus surface surgeon Surgery Surgical Journal symptoms tion treatment tumor ulcer urethra urine uterus vessels week wound York
Popular passages
Page 283 - TIRED nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep ! He, like the world, his ready visit pays Where fortune smiles, the wretched he forsakes: Swift on his downy pinions flies from woe, And lights on lids unsullied with a tear.
Page 77 - Father, who wouldest not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wickedness and live...
Page 92 - SEC. 2. That so much of the Act of the twenty-third day of July, eighteen hundred and ninety-two, as is inconsistent with the provisions of this Act is hereby repealed.
Page 17 - York, as their medical department, under the name of the College of Physicians and Surgeons In the City of New York.
Page 265 - Let him turn on his right side ; place his head comfortably on the pillow, so that it exactly occupies the angle a line drawn from the head to the shoulder would form ; and then, slightly closing his lips, take rather a full inspiration, breathing as much as he possibly can through the nostrils.
Page 83 - The person to be inoculated is pricked with the tooth of the serpent, on the tongue, in both arms, and on various parts of the body; and the venom introduced into the wounds. An eruption comes out, which lasts a few days. Ever after, these persons can handle the most venomous snakes with impunity; can make them come by calling them, have great pleasure in fondling...
Page 342 - He who, for an ordinary cause, resigns the fate of his patient to mercury, is a vile enemy to the sick; and if he is tolerably popular, will, in one successful season, have paved the way for the business of life ; for he has enough to do ever afterwards to stop the mercurial breach of the constitutions of his dilapidated patients.
Page 198 - in a child that is not able to gargle, this solution may be injected into the nostrils and against the fauces by means of a syringe or elastic bottle. The effect of this application is sometimes most encouraging. A quantity of offensive sloughy matter is brought away ; the acrid discharge is rendered harmless ; the running from the nose and diarrhoea cease ; and the disease is converted into a form which approximates to the scarlatina anginosa.
Page 169 - Caucasian, are the shortest lived of any class of the human race. " '3d. That the mulattoes are not more liable to die under the age of 25 than the whites or blacks...
Page 34 - Lemann's biscuit-powder," soaked for twelve hours in cold spring water, then boiled for half an hour, not simmered, or it will turn sour. Very little sugar to be added to the food, and then only at the time when given. Sweets, of every kind, are most injurious, producing acidity, flatulency, and indigestion, sores in the mouth, and disordered secretions. An infant will take medicine the more readily if made lukewarm in a cup placed in hot water, adding a very little sugar when given.