Page 98 |
Previous | 109 of 469 | Next |
|
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
Loading content ...
9s THE CHARLOTTE MEDICAL JOURNAL. XXVli physicial strength remained, and his counsels were always sought and valued while he participated in its active work. He expressed to the members, not more than a year ago, his keen regret that failing health would not permit continued attendance upon the deliberations of the society. 4th. Dr. Ramsay was second to none in upholding and illustrating the ethics of the profession, and he recognized in every practising physician a brother bound to him with strong and tender ties. 5th. Dr. Ransay's personal and religious life were conspicuously free from blame, and he was, emphatically, a pure man. Habits of abstemiousness and temperance ruled his life, and his speech and behaviour, at all times, were such as to commend him to his associates as one worthy of emulation. His attitude, in his latter days illustrated, strikingly, the bible truth that "The hoary head is a crown of glory if it be found in the way of righteousness." 6th. Resolved that a copy of the preamble and resolutions be sent to the members of the family, and also to each of the city papers aud the State Medical Journals for publication ; and that a page on our record book be set apart to his memory. John Whitehead,") W. L. Crump, i ^ ... T 0 -p, ' > Committee. J. S. Brown, I. H. Foust, J Book Notices. Saunders' Medical Hand-Atlases—Atlas and Epitome of Diseases of the Mouth, Pharynx, and Nose. By Dr. L. Grun-wald, of Munich. From the second Revised and Enlarged German Edition. Edited, with additions, by James E. Newcomb, M. D., Instructor in Laryngology, Cornell University Medical School; Attending Laryngologist to the Roosevelt Hospital, Out-Patient Department. With 102 illustrations on 42 colored lithographic plates, 41 text cuts, and 219 pages of text. Philadelphia and London : W. B. Saunders & Co., 1903. Cloth, $3.00 net. In designing this atlas the author has kept constantly in mind the needs of both student and practitioner, and as far as possible, typical cases of the various diseases have been selected. The illustrations are described in the text in exactly the same way as a practised examiner would demonstrate the objective findings to his class, the book thus serving as a substitute for actual clinical work. The illustrations themselves are numerous and exceedingly well executed, portraying the conditions so strikingly that their study is almost equal to examination of the actual specimens. The editor has incorporated his own valuable experience, and has also included extensive notes on the use of the active principle of the suprarenal bodies in the materia medica of rhinology and laryngology. The work, besides being an excellent atlas and epitome of the diseases of the mouth, pharynx, and nose, serves also as a text-book on the anatomy and physiology of these organs. Indeed, we wonder how the author has encompassed so much within such a limited space. We heartily commend the work as the best we have seen. Culbreth's Materia Medica and Pharmacology. Third Edition. A Manual of Materia Medica and Pharmacology. Comprising all Organic and Inorganic Drugs which are and have been official in the United States Pharmacopoeia, together with important Allied Species and Useful Synthetics. By David M. R. Cul-breth, M. D., Professor of Botany, Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy in the Maryland College of Pharmacy, Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy in the University of Maryland Medical and Dental Schools, Baltimore. Third edition enlarged and thoroughly revised. In one octavo volume of 905 pages, with 473 illustrations, cloth, $4.75, net. Lea Brothers & Co., Publishers; Philadelphia and New York, 1903. The growing appreciation of this work is shown by the fact that its second edition has doubled the rate of sale of the original issue. The third edition not only shows a thorough revision to date, but it also reflects the future by forecasting the new United States Pharmacopoeia. The outlined list of proposed official drugs and preparations already determined upon by the committee has been used as a guide in preparing this edition, in consequence of which a number of articles that are to be accepted have been treated prominently, while those that are to be discarded have been considered briefly. The recapitulation tables also have been compiled in accordance with this same list, and therefore contain only those drugs which will be recognized officially. In many other respects the entire volume will be found to reflect the spirit of the new Pharmacopoeia, and it will be of Peculiar interest and value to all who desire to be posted in advance upon the corning changes so far as they affect Materia Medica and Pharmacology. The arrangement of the work having proved so successful in previous editions has not been altered. It is based upon the principle of associating, as nearly as pos-
Object Description
Rating | |
Fixed Title * | NCHH-21: Charlotte Medical Journal [1892-1921] |
Document Title | Charlotte Medical Journal [1892-1921] |
Subject Topical | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Description | Absorbed Carolina medical journal in 1908 and continued its vol. numbering with v. 58. Vol. 4, no. 3 (Mar. 1894) misnumbered as v. 4, no. 5. |
Publisher | Charlotte, N.C. : Blakey Print. House, 1892-1921. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1903 |
Identifier | NCHH-21-022 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 22 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-21/nchh-21-022.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-e; nchh-21 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-21-022 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-21 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb2666817 |
Revision History | keep |
Description
Fixed Title * | Page 98 |
Document Title | Charlotte Medical Journal [1892-1921] |
Subject Topical | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Description | Absorbed Carolina medical journal in 1908 and continued its vol. numbering with v. 58. Vol. 4, no. 3 (Mar. 1894) misnumbered as v. 4, no. 5. |
Publisher | Charlotte, N.C. : Blakey Print. House, 1892-1921. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1903 |
Identifier | NCHH-21-022-0114 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Page Type | all; report/review; obituary |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Filename | charlottemedical221903char_0114.jp2 |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 22 |
Issue Number | 1 |
Page Number | 98 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Full Text | 9s THE CHARLOTTE MEDICAL JOURNAL. XXVli physicial strength remained, and his counsels were always sought and valued while he participated in its active work. He expressed to the members, not more than a year ago, his keen regret that failing health would not permit continued attendance upon the deliberations of the society. 4th. Dr. Ramsay was second to none in upholding and illustrating the ethics of the profession, and he recognized in every practising physician a brother bound to him with strong and tender ties. 5th. Dr. Ransay's personal and religious life were conspicuously free from blame, and he was, emphatically, a pure man. Habits of abstemiousness and temperance ruled his life, and his speech and behaviour, at all times, were such as to commend him to his associates as one worthy of emulation. His attitude, in his latter days illustrated, strikingly, the bible truth that "The hoary head is a crown of glory if it be found in the way of righteousness." 6th. Resolved that a copy of the preamble and resolutions be sent to the members of the family, and also to each of the city papers aud the State Medical Journals for publication ; and that a page on our record book be set apart to his memory. John Whitehead") W. L. Crump, i ^ ... T 0 -p, ' > Committee. J. S. Brown, I. H. Foust, J Book Notices. Saunders' Medical Hand-Atlases—Atlas and Epitome of Diseases of the Mouth, Pharynx, and Nose. By Dr. L. Grun-wald, of Munich. From the second Revised and Enlarged German Edition. Edited, with additions, by James E. Newcomb, M. D., Instructor in Laryngology, Cornell University Medical School; Attending Laryngologist to the Roosevelt Hospital, Out-Patient Department. With 102 illustrations on 42 colored lithographic plates, 41 text cuts, and 219 pages of text. Philadelphia and London : W. B. Saunders & Co., 1903. Cloth, $3.00 net. In designing this atlas the author has kept constantly in mind the needs of both student and practitioner, and as far as possible, typical cases of the various diseases have been selected. The illustrations are described in the text in exactly the same way as a practised examiner would demonstrate the objective findings to his class, the book thus serving as a substitute for actual clinical work. The illustrations themselves are numerous and exceedingly well executed, portraying the conditions so strikingly that their study is almost equal to examination of the actual specimens. The editor has incorporated his own valuable experience, and has also included extensive notes on the use of the active principle of the suprarenal bodies in the materia medica of rhinology and laryngology. The work, besides being an excellent atlas and epitome of the diseases of the mouth, pharynx, and nose, serves also as a text-book on the anatomy and physiology of these organs. Indeed, we wonder how the author has encompassed so much within such a limited space. We heartily commend the work as the best we have seen. Culbreth's Materia Medica and Pharmacology. Third Edition. A Manual of Materia Medica and Pharmacology. Comprising all Organic and Inorganic Drugs which are and have been official in the United States Pharmacopoeia, together with important Allied Species and Useful Synthetics. By David M. R. Cul-breth, M. D., Professor of Botany, Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy in the Maryland College of Pharmacy, Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy in the University of Maryland Medical and Dental Schools, Baltimore. Third edition enlarged and thoroughly revised. In one octavo volume of 905 pages, with 473 illustrations, cloth, $4.75, net. Lea Brothers & Co., Publishers; Philadelphia and New York, 1903. The growing appreciation of this work is shown by the fact that its second edition has doubled the rate of sale of the original issue. The third edition not only shows a thorough revision to date, but it also reflects the future by forecasting the new United States Pharmacopoeia. The outlined list of proposed official drugs and preparations already determined upon by the committee has been used as a guide in preparing this edition, in consequence of which a number of articles that are to be accepted have been treated prominently, while those that are to be discarded have been considered briefly. The recapitulation tables also have been compiled in accordance with this same list, and therefore contain only those drugs which will be recognized officially. In many other respects the entire volume will be found to reflect the spirit of the new Pharmacopoeia, and it will be of Peculiar interest and value to all who desire to be posted in advance upon the corning changes so far as they affect Materia Medica and Pharmacology. The arrangement of the work having proved so successful in previous editions has not been altered. It is based upon the principle of associating, as nearly as pos- |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-21/nchh-21-022.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-e; nchh-21 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-21-022 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-21 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb2666817 |
Revision History | keep |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Page 98