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ave used S. H KENNEDY'S EXTRACT PINUS CANADENSIS

The Kansas City
Medical Index-lancet

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Horace Tracy Hanks, M. D., Member of the Co. Med. Soc.,
N.Y. State Med. Soc., N.Y. Academy of Medicine, N. Y. Obstet
rical Society, etc., Surgeon Woman's Hospital.

I want to call attention to Lysol, which I believe in a one-
per-cent. solution is a much better antiseptic to handle than
carbolic acid or mercuric bi-chloride. It is something like
creolin. It mixes with water. A one per cent. solution is amply
sufficient to cleanse the hands, and a one-half per cent. solu-
tion is strong enough for vaginal injection. It is soothing to
the hands, when not too strong, and costs less than carbolic
acid. I have used it for some months, and have used it to the
exclusion of other germicides in seven laparotomies during
the last four weeks; in each case my patients have done well.
-Transactions of the New York Obstetrical Society, Stated
Meeting, Feb. 16, 1892.-N. Y. Journ. Gyn. & Obstetrics.

An "Ideal

Disinfectant"
and Antiseptic.

Lysol &

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TRADE MARK.

Put up in One Pound Bottles.

(1 pound furnishes 12 gallons
of a 1% solution.)

A full descriptive pamphlet, con-
taining interesting monograph, clinical
reports and extracts on LYSOL, sent to phy.
sicians free on request.

LEHN & FINK, Sole Agents, NEW YORK.

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"The nature of the Sickness found, What is the Remedy?"

-Troilus and Cressida.

In Cholera Infantum and summer diarrhoeal disorders "the nature of the sickness," in its incipiency, is most frequently a functional weakness of digestion. The organic changes consequent upon inflammatory action, are sequelae resulting from the continuance and extension of this deficient functination. This, we take it, constitutes the "pith and marrow" of the causation of the trouble. Then: "What is the remedy?"

Lactopeptine will greatly aid in restoring such weak functions to their normal vigor, by furnishing the digestive juices with the natural ferments which they lack. If you are not familiar with the use of Lactopeptine in these cases, Doctor, like

Cap'n Cuttle, "make a note of it."

Send for

"LACTOPEPTINE CALENDAR."

Just out.

The N. Y. Pharmacal Association,

YONKERS, N. Y.

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Deformity***** *Apparatus.

We have added a Manufacturing and Repair Department to our establishment, and can now supply Braces and Appliancse at

LOWER PRICES

than they have ever been sold in the west.

Repairing and Replating Instruments of all kinds will receive prompt attention.

J. D. PORTER, Pres.

ELASTIC HOSIERY.

J. N. SCOTT,

PHYSICIANS' SUPPLIES,

Antiseptic Dressings, Crutches, Batteries

Cottons, Etc.

SURGICAL

Thermometers, Hypodermic Syringes, INSTRUMENTS.

I will not be Undersold. Write for quotations.

Telephone 1599.

NO. 920 MAIN STREET,

THE JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE of Philadelphia.

KANSAS CITY, MO.

The Annual Session of the Jefferson Medical College begins October 2d, and Continues over seven months. Preliminary Lectures will be held from 25th of September. Course of Instruction and Facilities.-Three years of graded instruction are required of candidates presenting themselves for the degree of M. D.. but the voluntary fourth-year course which is now offered is strongly recommended. The instruction consists in didactic lectures, amply supplemented by clinical teaching at the bedside and in the laboratories and dispensaries.

In addition to the members of the Faculty there is a large corps of experienced instructors who assist the professors in practical work in the laboratories or in bedside work at the hospitals and dispensaries. Every candidate for the degree is personally taught, by dividing the class into small sections, in Clinical Medicine and Physical Diagnosis, Obstetics and Gynæology, Major and Minor Surgery and Bandaging, Orthopaedic Surgery, Discases of Children, Ophthalmology, Neurology, Otology, Dermatology, Laryngology, and Genito-Urinary Diseases. Ample clinical material is afforded by the Jefferson College Hospital, in which no less than 300 patients are treated daily, and by the Philadelphia and other Hospitals.

Laboratory instruction is given in Medical Chemisty, Pharmacy, Physiology, Clinical Microscopy, Anatomy, and Histology, and in Operative Obstetrics, Surgery, Pathology, and Hygiene.

Daily instruction in the practical branches is given in the Hospital of the College, is a special feature of the course in the second and third years, and is without extra charge.

The Annual Announcement, giving full particulars, will be sent on application to
J. W. HOLLAND, M. D., Dean

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