| Medicine - 1821 - 846 pages
...four days. A few exceptions to these general remarks are described in four cases, for the particulars of which we must refer our readers to the work itself. The following rules of practice, drawn from his observation and experience, we shall give in Mr. Cross'... | |
| Science - 1822 - 536 pages
...central adjustment of a triple object-glass which appears not to have been used for that purpose, but for the details of which we must refer our readers to the paper itself, as they would be useless without the accompanying plate. The principle and its result... | |
| Agriculture - 1822 - 526 pages
...central adjustment of a. triple object-glass which appears not to have been used for that purpose, but for the details of which we must refer our readers to the paper itself, as they would be useless without the accompanying plate. The principle and its result... | |
| Medicine - 1823 - 692 pages
...four days. A few exceptions to these general remarks are described in four cases, for the particulars of which we must refer our readers to the work itself. The following rules of practice, drawn'from his observation and experience, we shall give in Mr. Cross's... | |
| 1846 - 906 pages
...rather than by frames; by practice, ami not by flaming profession. But to the subject of this sketch — for the details of which, we must refer our readers to the Memoir, whoso outline we have so hurriedly traced — tho night speedily came, when his work was over.... | |
| W. I. Bicknell - London (England) - 1846 - 226 pages
...the same during the year 1337. It is foreign to our purpose to follow the king in his foreign wars, for the details of which we must refer our readers to the history of England. It will, notwithstanding, be impossible to continue a history of London without... | |
| Medicine, Eclectic - 1872 - 918 pages
...the operation is complete, and the healing of the deep excavation alone requires to be attended to, for the details of which we must refer our readers to the pamphlet. Dr. Bell does not pretend to say that this mode of operation will effect a permanent cure... | |
| Education - 1851 - 502 pages
...literature which are best suited to be admitted, as progressive studies, into a liberal education ; for the details of which we must refer our readers to the work itself. He also observes, that classical studies occupy an important place in education as progressive studies,... | |
| Medicine - 1862 - 586 pages
...made a series of inquiries, with a view to discovering the truth, or the source thereof. The results, for the details of which we must refer our readers to the original papers,J were, that all the accounts put before English readers in various non-professional... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - Science - 1900 - 1062 pages
...Cowstock and Needham's important contributions to the study of the structure of the wings of insects, for the details of which we must refer our readers to the memoir itself. MESSRS. FRIEDLANDF.R AND SON, Berlin, have just issued a catalogue (No. 439) containing... | |
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