The Southern Dental Journal, Volume 16

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R.A. Holliday, 1897
 

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Page 122 - If used as a douche with the tube a 5 or 6 per cent, solution is not too strong, and two quarts the minimum amount. These douchings may be given one to six or seven times a week, according to the requirements of the case, and are frequently all the treatment this stage of chronic gastritis demands, except what changes are necessary in the diet.
Page 219 - For where two or three are gathered together in My Name, there I am in the midst of them.
Page 148 - ... always will, hold good. In this connection I wish to quote from one of the current textbooks on orthodontia : "When one parent possesses a large frame, with...
Page 48 - MEDICINE — may be defined to be that science which teaches the application of every branch of medical knowledge to the purposes of the law ; hence its limits are, on the one hand, the requirements of the law, and on the other, the whole range of medicine. Anatomy, physiology, medicine, surgery, chemistry, physics, and botany, lend their aid as necessity arises; and in some cases all these branches of science are required to enable a Court of Law to arrive at a proper conclusion on a contested question...
Page 146 - ... knot. In summing up, the order of treatment followed in the lectures may be reversed, and we. can begin with the germ cells, and condense the more or less ascertained facts. The germ cells: (1) The material substance of hereditary transmission is the highly coloring protoplasm, or chromatin, in the nucleus of the germ cells, probably connected with a certain form of archoplasm, or dynamic protoplasm outside of the nucleus.
Page 123 - Glycozone may be administered in teaspoonful doses after meals with very satisfactory results. This line of treatment is frequently so successful that cases are temporarily relieved and possibly often a cure effected, particularly if the general treatment has been judiciously carried out.
Page 145 - In the immense majority of both plants and animals, it is certain that the germ is not merely a body in which life is dormant or potential, but that it is itself simply a detached portion of the substance of a pre-existing living body...
Page 145 - In attempting to analyze the problems that it involves, we must from the outset hold fast to the fact, on which Huxley insisted, that the wonderful formative energy of the germ is not impressed upon it from without, but is inherent in the egg as a heritage from the parental life of which it was originally a part. The development of the embryo is nothing new.
Page 24 - In the latter part of the last and early part of the present century, English medals were coined following the Mohammedan and Hindu system.
Page 157 - RICHARDSON'S Mechanical Dentistry. A Practical Treatise on Mechanical Dentistry. By JOSEPH RICHARDSON, DDS Seventh Edition. Thoroughly Revised and in many parts Rewritten by DR.

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