The Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, Volume 36

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Lakeside Publishing Company, 1906
A monthly magazine of practical nursing, devoted to the improvement and development of the graduate nurse.

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Page 395 - Wide Reputation, particularly in the treatment of Chronic Bronchitis, and other affections of the respiratory organs. It has also been employed with much success in various nervous and debilitating diseases. Its Curative Power is largely attributable to its stimulant, tonic, and nutritive properties, by means of which the energy of the system is recruited. Its Action is Prompt ; it stimulates the appetite and the digestion, it promotes assimilation, and it enters directly into the circulation with...
Page 132 - Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life, whereunto thou art also called, and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses.
Page 195 - Fellows, who has examined samples of several of these, finds that no two of them are identical, and that all of them differ from the original in composition, in freedom from acid reaction, in susceptibility to the effects of oxygen when exposed to light or heat, in the property of retaining the strychnine in solution, and in the medicinal effects. As these cheap and inefficient substitutes are frequently dispensed instead of the genuine preparation, physicians are earnestly requested, when prescribing...
Page 195 - SYR. HYPOPHOS. CO., FELLOWS Contains the Essential Elements of the Animal Organization— Potash and Lime ; The Oxidising Agents — Iron and Manganese; The Tonics— Quinine and Strychnine ; And the Vitalizing Constituent — Phosphorus ; the whole combined in the form of a Syrup with a Slightly Alkaline Reaction. It Differs in its Effects from all Analogous Preparations; and it possesses the important properties of being pleasant to the taste, easily...
Page 4 - You are my true and honourable wife; As dear to me, as are the ruddy drops That visit my sad heart.
Page 14 - It is the lives, like the stars, which simply pour down on us the calm light of their bright and faithful being, up to which we look and out of which we gather the deepest calm and courage.
Page 320 - Tablets are suggested for the relief of all neuroses of the larynx, bronchial as well as the deep-seated coughs, which are so often among the most prominent symptoms In fact, for the troublesome coughs which so frequently follow or hang on after an attack of influenza, and as a winter remedy in the troublesome conditions of the respiratory tract, there is no better relief than one or two Antikamnia and Codeine Tablets slowly dissolved upon the tongue, swallowing the saliva.
Page 64 - Some miners employed in sinking a shaft near here encountered numerous streams of sulphur water. Though a careful analysis of the water has not been made, it is sufficient for me to state that it gives rise to an acute conjunctivitis. The pain is most excruciating, and can be relieved only by the use of cocaine, and even cocaine is useless unless preceded by Adrenalin Chloride. My practice has been to use Adrenalin Chloride...
Page 207 - Get some clean, fine sand, dry it thoroughly in a kettle on the stove ; make a bag about eight inches square of flannel, fill it with the dry sand, sew the opening carefully together, and cover the bag with cotton or linen cloth.
Page 122 - HUNGRY BLOOD Blood that is starved because it has not the capacity for absorbing oxygen ; thin blood •which has not been nourished ; weak blood which has lost the power for replenishing waste and building new tissue. Thin blood makes a thin body. Feed the blood and you feed the body. If the blood is lacking in red corpuscles and haemoglobin it needs rebuilding that it may be capable of performing its task of reconstruction.

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