Medical Visitor and Directory of Homoeopathic Physicians, Volume 5

Front Cover
Halsey Bros. Company, 1889
List of homoeopathic physicians by states.
 

Contents

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 220 - for the purpose of obtaining more accurate returns of deaths than it is possible for the enumerators to make. It is earnestly hoped that physicians in every part of the country will co-operate with the Census Office in this important work. The record should be kept from June 1, 1889, to May 31, 1890.
Page 57 - Diseases in the University of the City of New York ; Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc. Second Edition Revised and Enlarged by AD ROCKWELL, AM, MD, Professor of Electro-Therapeutics in the New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital, Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, etc.
Page 220 - June 1, 1889, to May 31, 1890. Nearly 26,000 of these registration books were filled up and returned to the office in 1880, and nearly all of them used for statistical purposes. It is hoped that double this number will be obtained for the Eleventh Census. Physicians not receiving registers can obtain them by sending their names and addresses to the Census Office, and, with the Register, an official envelope which requires no stamp will be provided for their return to Washington.
Page 113 - The prospects are that this: will be one among the largest gatherings of medical men ever assembled in this country. Dr. WB Outten, of St. Louis, is the Chairman of the Committee of Arrangements, and everything will be complete for the accommodation of the surgeons. Any information desired can be had by addressing the Secretary, CB Stemen, MD , Fort Wayne, Ind.
Page 413 - BOVININE combines in a concentrated form all the extractive or albuminous properties of uncooked beef, together with its stimulating salts. Dr. Geo. D. Hays, of New York Post Graduate School, in an exhaustive essay on Artificial Alimentation, thus alludes to BOVININE : "Of the preparations of raw food extracts one has a clinically proved value. It is rich in nitrogenous substances and phosphates. It is readily digested and absorbed and can be relied upon for the entire sustenance of the body for...
Page 8 - As information is received from them it will be sent to the journals for publication. The secretary may be pardoned for suggesting that papers be completed early and copies made and submitted for examination to those likely to participate in the discussion thereon, thus adding to the interest and profit of the -Sectional Meetings. These copies could then be sent to such journals as their authors might select, thus securing their wider publicity, yet without interfering with the prompt publication...
Page 57 - ITS HYGIENE, CAUSES, SYMPTOMS AND TREATMENT, WITH A CHAPTER ON DIET FOR THE NERVOUS. By GEORGE M. BEARD, AM, MD, formerly Lecturer on Nervous Diseases in the University of the City of New York ; Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine ; Author of "Our Home Physician," "Hay Fever;" one of the Authors of " Medical and Surgical Electricity,
Page 13 - ' a resume in dictionary form, of New Remedies and New Treatment that have come to the knowledge of the Medical Profession throughout the world during 1888. The editorial staff of the forthcoming volume, will include articles or departments edited by Sir Morrell...
Page 77 - Report on Medical Education, Medical Colleges, and the Regulation of the Practice of Medicine in the United States and Canada, 1765-1891.
Page 7 - St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota, beginning Monday evening, June 24th, and continuing until Friday night June 28th, 1889. Details of the arrangements will from time to time be furnished to the homoeopathic journals for publication. The proper committees are actively engaged in securing such arrangements as will assure the...

Bibliographic information