The Medical Age, Volume 16

Front Cover
.E. G. Swift, 1898
 

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Page 206 - The question always is: Was there an unbroken connection between the wrongful act and the injury, a continuous operation? Did the facts constitute a continuous succession of events, so linked together as to make a natural whole, or was there sottfe new and Independent cause intervening between the wrong and the injury?
Page 725 - Containing the pronunciation and definition of the principal words used in medicine and kindred sciences, with 64 extensive tables.
Page 146 - AM, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children in the Medical Department of the Columbian University, Washington, DC, and in the University of Vermont, etc., etc..
Page 598 - A Clinical Text-Book of Medical Diagnosis for Physicians and Students, Based on the Most Recent Methods of Examination. By Oswald Vierordt, MD, Professor of Medicine at the University of Heidelberg, etc., etc.
Page 597 - A Text-Book Upon the Pathogenic Bacteria. For Students of Medicine and Physicians. By Joseph McFarland, MD, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology in the Medico-Chirurgical College, Philadelphia : Pathologist to the Philadelphia Hospital and to the Medico-Chirurgical Hospital, Philadelphia.
Page 725 - Dictoinary. — :A pocket medical dictionary, giving the pronunciation and definition of the principal words used in medicine and the collateral sciences, including very complete tables of...
Page 116 - A Yearly Digest of Scientific Progress and Authoritative Opinion in all branches of Medicine and Surgery, drawn from journals, monographs, and text-books of the leading American and Foreign authors and investigators. Collected and arranged, with critical editorial comments, by eminent American specialists and teachers, under the general editorial charge of GEORGE M.
Page 632 - A Treatise on the Principles and Practice of Gynecology, for Students and Practitioners. By EC Dudley, AM, MD, Professor of Gynecology, Northwestern University Medical School ; Gynecologist to St. Luke's Hospital, etc., etc.
Page 586 - No doubt typhoid fever, camp diarrhea, and probably yellow fever are frequently communicated to soldiers in camp through the agency of flies, which swarm about fecal matter and filth of all kinds deposited upon the ground or in shallow pits, and directly convey infectious material attached to their feet or contained in their excreta to the food which is exposed while being prepared at the company kitchens or while being served in the mess tents.
Page 726 - THE CARE OF THE BABY. — A Manual for Mothers and Nurses, containing Practical Directions for the Management of Infancy and Childhood in Health and in Disease.

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