The Cincinnati Lancet-clinic, Volume 61

Front Cover
J.C. Culbertson, 1889 - Medicine
 

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Page 69 - If it is colored, coated, polished, or powdered, whereby damage or inferiority is concealed, or if by any means it is made to appear better or of greater value than it really is.
Page 69 - In the case of food or drink. 1. If any substance or substances has or have been mixed with it so as to reduce or lower or injuriously affect its quality or strength.
Page 296 - The power of the State to provide for the general welfare of its people authorizes it to prescribe all such regulations as, in its judgment, will secure or tend to secure them against the consequences of ignorance and incapacity as well as of deception and fraud.
Page 529 - Being come to their lodging, whilst supper was making ready, they repeated certain passages of that which had been read, and then sat down at table. Here remark, that his dinner was sober and thrifty, for he did then eat only to prevent the gnawings of his stomach, but his supper was copious and large ; for he took then as much as was fit to maintain and nourish him; which indeed is the true diet prescribed by the art of good and sound physic, although a rabble of loggerheaded physicians, muzzled...
Page 296 - The nature and extent of the qualifications required must depend primarily upon the judgment of the State as to their necessity. If they are appropriate to the calling or profession, and attainable by reasonable study or application, no objection to their validity can be raised because of their stringency or difficulty. It is...
Page 69 - In the case of food: (1) If any substance or substances have been mixed with it, so as to lower or depreciate, or injuriously affect its quality, strength, or purity; (2) If any inferior or cheaper substance, or substances have been substituted wholly or in part for it; (3) If any valuable or necessary constituent or ingredient has been wholly or in part abstracted from it...
Page 273 - There were many cases in which at the end of the first or the beginning of the second week...
Page 572 - IV, in the National Code of Medical Ethics, is not to be interpreted as excluding from professional fellowship, on the ground of differences in doctrine or belief, those who in other respects are entitled to be members of the regular medical profession. Neither is there any other article or clause of the .said Code of Ethics that interferes with the exercise of the most perfect liberty of individual opinion and practice.
Page 121 - A plague on Egypt's arts, I say ! Embalm the dead ! on senseless clay Rich wines and spices waste ! Like sturgeon, or like brawn, shall I Bound in a precious pickle, lie, Which I can never taste ? Let me embalm this flesh of mine With turtle-fat, mid Bordeaux wine, And spoil th' Egyptian trade ! Than Humphrey's Duke more happy I — Embalm'd alive, old Quin shall die A mummy ready made.
Page 252 - Electricity in all its forms, baths, douches, massage, inhalations, nursing, etc., are provided as may be required by patients in addition to such other medical treatment as may be deemed advisable.

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