Southern Practitioner: An Independent Monthly Journal Devoted to Medicine and Surgery, Volume 13

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1891
 

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Page 182 - Edited by Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia.
Page 505 - HOLLAND. The Urine, the Gastric Contents, the Common Poisons and the Milk. Memoranda, Chemical and Microscopical, for Laboratory Use. By JW HOLLAND, MD, Professor of Medical Chemistry and Toxicology in Jefferson Medical College, of Philadelphia.
Page 280 - Professor of Materia Medica, Pharmacology, Therapeutics and Clinical Medicine, and Clinical Professor of Diseases of the Skin...
Page 551 - By JOHN C. SHAW, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of the Mind and Nervous System, Long Island College Hospital Medical School ; Consulting Neurologist to St. Catherine's Hospital and to the Long Island College Hospital ; formerly Medical Superintendent King's County Insane Asylum.
Page 225 - ... representation shall have the privilege of sending to the Association one delegate for every ten of its regular resident members, and one for every additional fraction of more than half that number; Provided, however that the number of delegates for any particular State, Territory, county, city or town shall not exceed the ratio of one in ten of the resident physicians who may have signed the Code of Ethics of the Association.
Page 371 - SEXUAL NEURASTHENIA, (NERVOUS EXHAUSTION ) 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 130 - Compend of Gynaecology. BY HENRY MORRIS, MD, late Demonstrator of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia.
Page 281 - Annual more than ever welcome to the Profession, as providing, at a reasonable outlay, the handiest and best resume of Medical Progress yet offered. Part one comprises the New Remedies, together with a Review of the Therapeutic Progress of the Year.
Page 414 - I have employed this medicine in cases of dysmenorrhea, suppression of the catemania, and in excessive leucorrhea, and have been much pleased with its use. I do not think its claims (as set forth in the circular accompanying it) to be at all excessive. I recommend its trial to all who are willing to trust to its efficacy, believing it will give satisfaction.
Page 279 - Robinson's" is a highly elegant preparation, and possesses an advantage over some others, in that it holds the various salts, including Iron, Quinine, and Strychnine, etc., in perfect solution, and is not liable to the formation of fungous growths.

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