The Lancet, Volume 1J. Onwhyn, 1845 - Medicine |
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acid action amount animal appeared applied Association attended become Bill blood body called carbon cause charter College committee communication consequence considerable considered contained continued council course directed disease effect evident examination existence experiments fact finger fluid frequently give given hand head heat Hospital important increased inflammation insanity instance interests James John LANCET less letter London matter means medicine meeting mesmeric nature necessary object observed obtained occur operation opinion organ pain passed patient period persons physician portion potassium practice practitioners present produced profession proposed prove quantity question RADCLYFFE HALL received reference remains remarks removed respect result salts side Society solution substance surface surgeon surgery symptoms taken tion treatment urine vessels whole
Popular passages
Page 274 - Any Person who shall wilfully and falsely pretend to be or take or use the Name or Title of a Physician, Doctor of Medicine, Licentiate in Medicine and Surgery, Bachelor of Medicine, Surgeon, General Practitioner or Apothecary, or any Name, Title, Addition, or Description implying that he is registered under this Act...
Page 271 - An Act for Prevention of Frauds and Perjuries, and of an Act passed in the Parliament of Ireland in the seventh year of the reign of King William the Third, intituled An Act for Prevention of Frauds and Perjuries...
Page 274 - Excise, or by Action of Debt, Bill, Plaint, or Information, in any of his Majesty's Courts of Record at Westminster, or in the Court of Exchequer in Scotland...
Page 271 - * and so much of another act passed in the eighteenth year of the reign of King George the Second, intituled, " An Act for making the Surgeons of London and the Barbers of London two separate and distinct Corporations...
Page 274 - January one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine, no person shall be entitled to recover any Charge in any court of law for any medical or surgical advice, attendance, or for the performance of any operation, or for any medicine which he shall have both prescribed and supplied, unless he shall prove upon the trial that he is registered under this Act.
Page 111 - ... (Jer. v. 31): compare also Isaiah viii. 19 with Acts xvi. 16 ; and the damsel possessed with a spirit of divination, which brought her masters much gain by soothsaying.
Page 274 - Every person who shall be registered under the provisions of this Act shall be exempt, if he shall so desire, from serving on all Juries and Inquests whatsoever, and from serving all corporate, parochial, ward, hundred, and township offices, and from serving in the militia...
Page 236 - This remark applies even more to the cervix uteri than to the body of the organ.
Page 79 - Modern Cookery in all its Branches, reduced to a System of Easy Practice. For the use of Private Families. In a Series of Receipts, all of which have been strictly tested, and are given with the most minute exactness. By ELIZA ACTON. New Edition : with Directions for Carving, and other Additions.
Page 272 - ... regulated by the lord high treasurer or the commissioners of her Majesty's treasury, or any three...