Medical News and Abstract, Volume 76

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Lea Brothers & Company, 1900 - Medicine
 

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Page 61 - The safest mode of remittance is by bank check or postal money order, drawn to the order of the undersigned ; where these are not accessible remittances for subscriptions may be made at the risk of the publishers by forwarding in registered letters.
Page 439 - REFRACTION AND How TO REFRACT. Including Sections on Optics, Retinoscopy, the Fitting of Spectacles and Eye-Glasses, etc. By James Thorington, AM, MD, Adjunct Professor of Ophthalmology in the Philadelphia Polyclinic and College for Graduates in Medicine ; Assistant Surgeon at Wills...
Page 67 - ... a knowledge of which is commonly and generally required of candidates for the degree of doctor of medicine, by reputable medical colleges in the United States.
Page 439 - Roberts' Modern Surgery. The Principles and Practice of Modern Surgery. For the use of Students and Practitioners of Medicine and Surgery. By JOHN B. ROBERTS, MD, Professor of Anatomy and Surgery in the Philadelphia Polyclinic...
Page 399 - MD, Professor of Materia Medica and Clinical Medicine in the College of Physicians and Surgeons...
Page 193 - The events leading to the schism now existing between the American Medical Association and the Medical Society of the State of New York...
Page 279 - Physiology by HD Collins, MD, Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy, and WH Rockwell. Jr.. AB, MD, Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York. 153 illustrations. Cloth, $1.50, net. L'ea Brothers & Co. Philadelphia and New York. This, the fourth volume' of "Lea's Series of Pocket Text-Books," furnishes a compendious, trustworthy and modern text-book of Physiology.
Page 262 - ... due weight should be given to the influence exerted by its irregularity or abeyance on the mind of the woman. In doing this, her previous history and temperament have to be considered.
Page 404 - Infants and young children may have suppuration in the middle ear without giving satisfactory evidence of pain, or without rupture of the drum membrane. 3. In the absence of other known cause of pain, from which...
Page 95 - ... time, and then its pace slackens while a younger one presses into first place, to be followed by a third, etc. In other words, each -hair has a life history and its rate of growth varies at different times. It is most rapid during the middle period of its life. When old, a hair falls out and a young one grows up in its place. As the hairs in a hair-group grow old and fall out successively, baldness is avoided.

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