The Detroit Medical Journal, Volume 1

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Leartus Connor, John Jolliffe Mulheron
E. B. Smith & Company, 1877 - Medicine - 958 pages

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Page 368 - I REMEMBER, I REMEMBER I REMEMBER, I remember The house where I was born, The little window where the sun Came peeping in at morn ; He never came a wink too soon, Nor brought too long a day, But now I often wish the night Had borne my breath away ! I remember, I remember...
Page 837 - I give half-drop doses of the 3x tincture every two, three or four hours, according to the urgency of the symptoms...
Page 505 - That it is the opinion of this convention that no two consecutive sets of lecture tickets shall be regarded as fulfilling the usual pre-requisites of instruction for graduation, where the time between the beginning of the first course and the end of the second is less than fifteen months.
Page 917 - The Ear: its Anatomy, Physiology, and Diseases. A Practical Treatise for the Use of Medical Students and Practitioners. By CHARLES H.
Page 830 - For breakfast, toast and rich soup made on a slow fire ; a walk before breakfast, and a good deal after it. A glass of wine in the forenoon from time to time. Good broth or soup to dinner, with meat of any kind he likes, but always the most nourishing. Several glasses of port or punch to be taken after dinner, till some enlivening effect is produced from them, and a dram (of whisky f ) after everything heavy.
Page 768 - You will next procure a straight board, to reach from the middle of the thigh to the middle of the...
Page 747 - To open the mind, to correct it, to refine it, to enable it to know, and to digest, master, rule, and use its knowledge, to give it power over its own faculties, application, flexibility, method, critical exactness, sagacity, resource, address, eloquent expression...
Page 174 - It does not give additional strength, but merely enables a man to draw upon his reserve energy. It may thus give assistance in a single effort, but not in prolonged exertions.
Page 747 - ... of things as he did, and study not his works but his method ; by the one we may become feeble imitators, by the other arrive at some ability of our own. But, as all biography assures us, he, and every other able thinker, has been formed, not by a parsimonious admeasurement of studies to some definite future object (which is Mr Edgeworth's maxim), but by taking a wide and liberal compass, and thinking a great deal on many subjects with no better end in view than because the exercise was one which...
Page 249 - Resolved, That the Secretary be requested to forward a copy of these resolutions to the family of the deceased ; and, also, to the DETROIT MEDICAL JOURNAL, and to each of the Mt Clemens papers, for publication.

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