St. Louis Medical and Surgical Journal, Volume 42, Issue 1

Front Cover
1843

From inside the book

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 17 - Livers consequently are in great perfection. This oil is manufactured by us on the sea-shore, with the greatest care, from fresh, healthy livers, of the Cod only, without the aid of any chemicals, by the simplest possible process and lowest temperature by which the oil can be separated from the cells of the livers. It is nearly devoid of color, odor, and flavor— having a bland fish-like, and lo most persons, not unpleasant taste.
Page 107 - Fifth edition, thoroughly revised and rewritten. In one royal 12mo. volume of 669 pages, with 144 illustrations. Cloth, $2.75 ; half bound, $3.00.
Page 14 - Diastase. ^ LIST OF MALTINE PREPARATIONS. MALTINE (Plain). MALTINE with Hops. MALTINE with Alteratives. MALTINE with Beef and Iron. MALTINE with Cod Liver Oil. MALTINE with Cod Liver Oil and Pancreatine. MALTINE with Hypophosphites. MALTINE with Phosphorus Comp. MALTINE with Peptones. MALTINE with Pepsin and Pancreatine.
Page 14 - MALTINE is prescribed by the most eminent members of the Medical Profession in the United States, Great Britain, India, China and the English Colonies, and is largely used at the principal Hospitals in preference to any of the Extracts of Malt.
Page 17 - Iron and astringencyof the Calisaya are overcome, without any injury to their active tonic principles, and blended into a beautiful amber-colored cordial, delicious to the taste and acceptable to the most delicate stomach. This preparation is made directly from the ROYAL CALISAYA BARK, not from ITS ALKALOIDS OR THEIR SALTS— being unlike other preparations called " Elixir of Calisaya and Iron," which are simply an Elixir of Quinine and Iron.
Page 14 - MD, Louisville, Ky., Prof, of Clinical Medicine and Diseases of Children, University, Louisville. JOHN. A. LARRABEE, MD.
Page 17 - Oil that can be depended upon as strictly pure and scientifically prepared, having been long felt by the medical profession, we were induced to undertake its manufacture at the Fishing Stations where the fish are brought to land every few hours, and the Livers consequently are in great perfection.
Page 14 - York, Prof, of Chemistry and Toxicology, Bellevue Hospital Medical College ; Prof. of Chemistry and Physics, College of the City of New York. WALTER S.

Bibliographic information