Southern Journal of Homoeopathy, Bind 3–4Southern Journal Publishing Company, 1886 |
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... Austin , Texas , all communications , advertisements , subscriptions books for review , etc. C Austin and New Orleans . Collaborators : WM . H. HOLCOMBE , M. D. , NEW ORLEANS , LA .; J. T. KENT , A. M. , M. D. , ST . LOUIS , MO .; F. H. ...
... Austin , Texas , all communications , advertisements , subscriptions books for review , etc. C Austin and New Orleans . Collaborators : WM . H. HOLCOMBE , M. D. , NEW ORLEANS , LA .; J. T. KENT , A. M. , M. D. , ST . LOUIS , MO .; F. H. ...
Side 1
The Southern Journal of Homœopathy . CY ine : ENT n Austin and New Orleans . Here the great Galen takes up the study of anatomy. PELLET SERIES , NO . 37 . JOURNAL SERIES , NO . 13. ' Editorial . A newspaper's View of the Code . THAT CODE ...
The Southern Journal of Homœopathy . CY ine : ENT n Austin and New Orleans . Here the great Galen takes up the study of anatomy. PELLET SERIES , NO . 37 . JOURNAL SERIES , NO . 13. ' Editorial . A newspaper's View of the Code . THAT CODE ...
Side 2
... Austin , nor in Texas , nor in the South , but that would have his range of practical useful- ness materially enlarged by contact with reputable physicians of the other schools . It is due ourselves , and it certainly is due our ...
... Austin , nor in Texas , nor in the South , but that would have his range of practical useful- ness materially enlarged by contact with reputable physicians of the other schools . It is due ourselves , and it certainly is due our ...
Side 17
... Austin , Texas ; W. E. Leonard of Minneapolis , Minn .; Millie J. Chapman , of Pittsburg , Pennsylvania . The following bureaus were announced by President Runnels : Bureau of Sanitary Science - H . E. Beebe , Chairman , Sidney , O ...
... Austin , Texas ; W. E. Leonard of Minneapolis , Minn .; Millie J. Chapman , of Pittsburg , Pennsylvania . The following bureaus were announced by President Runnels : Bureau of Sanitary Science - H . E. Beebe , Chairman , Sidney , O ...
Side 32
... Austin , Secretary of the Texas State Medical Association and president of the Examining Board for this district , died of Dysentery on July 10th , after an illness of one week . Dr. Orme , of Atlanta , has recently recovered from an ...
... Austin , Secretary of the Texas State Medical Association and president of the Examining Board for this district , died of Dysentery on July 10th , after an illness of one week . Dr. Orme , of Atlanta , has recently recovered from an ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Aconite action Allopathic American appearance Association attend Austin become believe better blood body called cause cold College comes complete condition continued course cure death Desire disease doctor doses drug editor effect especially experience fact Fever four friends give given hand head heart Homœopathic hospital hundred indicated Institute interest JOURNAL known less Materia Medica matter means medicine meeting ment months nature never operation organs Orleans pain passed patient physicians position practice present produce profession Quinine reason remedy removed seems seen side Society South Southern success suffering symptoms taken Texas things tion treated treatment true University whole York
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Side 49 - IT singeth low in every heart, We hear it each and all, — A song of those who answer not, However we may call. They throng the silence of the breast; We see them as of yore, — The kind, the true, the brave, the sweet, Who walk with us no more.
Side 125 - It is derogatory to the dignity of the profession, to resort to public advertisements or private cards or handbills, inviting the attention of individuals affected with particular diseases — publicly offering advice and medicine to the poor gratis, or promising radical cures ; or to publish cases and operations in the daily prints or suffer such publications to be made ; — to invite laymen to be present at operations, — to boast of cures and remedies, — to adduce certificates of skill and...
Side 21 - I firmly believe that if the whole materia medica, as now used, could be sunk to the bottom of the sea, it would be all the better for mankind, — and all the worse for the fishes.
Side 13 - O weird musician, thy harp strung with Apollo's golden hair; fill the vast cathedral aisles with symphonies sweet and dim, deft toucher of the organ keys ; blow, bugler, blow, until thy silver notes do touch and kiss the moonlit waves, and charm the lovers wandering 'mid the vine-clad hills. But know, your sweetest strains are discords all, compared with childhood's happy laugh— the laugh that fills the eyes with light and every heart with joy.
Side 90 - The hemorrhage persists because the clot, which forms at the rupture in the bloodvessel, is displaced by the air being drawn forcibly through the cavity in the attempt of the patient to clear the nostrils. If this air is prevented from passing through the cavity, the clot consolidates in' position, and the hemorrhage is checked.
Side 44 - Hughes. The literature of the whole medical world has felt the effect, and those works are the most popular in the old school that are the most saturated with this teaching — as is attested by the ready disposal pf Bartholow, Brunton, Phillips, and the eleven editions of Ringer.
Side 45 - ... gospel to the remotest bounds. Having once walked in the better way, they have no wish to return to the old labyrinth. Even that barrier to medical progress, that Chinese wall around therapeutic science, that barricade against truth built by the American Medical Association, and known as Sec. 1, Art. 4, Code of Ethics, even that, I say, has felt the battering-ram of this changed public opinion and is tumbling to the ground. I need not recount to you the steps of the desperate conflict that is...
Side 102 - ... 275. The fitness of a medicine in a given case of disease, does not depend alone upon its accurate homoeopathic selection, but also upon the requisite and proper size, or rather minuteness of the dose. Too strong a dose of medicine, though quite homoeopathic, notwithstanding its remedial nature, will necessarily produce an injurious effect.
Side 41 - As fruit of this the exanthemata and communicable diseases are being walled in ; the so-called "filth diseases" are becoming unpopular, disgraceful; the propagation and transmission of hereditary diseases are commencing, justly, to be rated as acts akin to crime, while that horrible pit of darkness, in which are committed sexual frauds and intrauterine murder, is being illuminated and ventilated and as far as possible disinfected with a thoroughness before unknown. Thus, year by year, is the realm...
Side 48 - The purity and reliability of our Materia Medica is a consummation to be desired by all ; but we have hardly yet begun to realize the great work that is here being accomplished for our science. To have the pathogenesis of every drug well authenticated; to have it freed from all error; to have it present the real truth of drug-ability in every instance, is to plant the feet of every prescriber on the bedrock of certainty; is to supply him with knowledge that will sustain him in the hours of extremity.