The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Band 71

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Cupples, Upham & Company, 1865
 

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Seite 68 - Walker on Intermarriage. Or, the Mode in which, and the Causes why, Beauty, Health, and Intellect result from certain Unions, and Deformity, Disease, and Insanity from others. With Illustrations. By ALEXANDER WALKER, Author of " Woman," " Beauty,
Seite 68 - DR. HEADLAND. ON THE ACTION OF MEDICINES IN THE SYSTEM. Being the Prize Essay to which the Medical Society of London awarded the Fothergillian Gold Medal for 1852. Second Edition. 8vo.
Seite 123 - The part of any solid body remaining after the rest is taken away," is a flattering description of one of our stumps of the thigh.
Seite 233 - When there, it may be i-ubjected to deoxidating processes, so that the nitrogen, being left in a free state, may be driven upwards by the expansive force of heat and steam, or by hydrostatic pressure. This theory has been very generally adopted, as best accounting for the constant disengagement of large bodies of nitrogen, even where the rocks through which the spring rises are crystalline and unf'ossiliferous. It will, however, of course be admitted, as...
Seite 316 - LADE (DD), MD DIPHTHERIA ; its Nature and Treatment, with an account of the History of its Prevalence in various Countries. Second and revised edition.
Seite 68 - A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. By J. FORSYTH MEIGS, MD, Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, &c., &c., and WILLIAM PEPPER, MD, Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital, &c.
Seite 309 - From these observations it follows that the forms and the distances of those objects which are situated in, or very nearly in, the Horopter, are perceived with a greater degree of accuracy than the same forms and distances would be when not situated in the Horopter. If we apply this result to those cases in which the ground whereon we stand is the plane of the Horopter, it follows that, looking straight forward to the horizon we can distinguish the inequalities and the distances of different parts...
Seite 68 - PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE, in its Social, Moral, and Physical Relations ; with an Account of the Diseases of the Genito-Urinary Organs, &c.
Seite 87 - ... 10 or 11 bougie, and broken the stone into various fragments. Next, I have taken the smaller lithotrite, above referred to, attacked these fragments, and then have used the small scoop with the object of removing several fragments, so that the patient might have satisfactory evidence that the st4one had been crushed.
Seite 273 - We cannot bat deplore that natural science should be looked upon with suspicion by many who do not make a study of it, merely on account of the unadvised manner in which some are placing it in opposition to Holy Writ. We believe that it is the duty of every scientific student to investigate nature simply for the purpose of elucidating truth...

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