NLM Digital Collections

Search

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Formats Text Remove constraint Formats: Text Dates by Range 1800-1849 Remove constraint Dates by Range: 1800-1849

Search Results

1894. The medical companion: treating, according to the most successful practice, I. The diseases common to warm climates and on ship board. II. Common cases in surgery, as fractures, dislocations, &c. III. The complaints peculiar to women and children. With a dispensatory and glossary. To which are added, a brief anatomy of the human body; an essay on hygeine [sic] or the art of preserving health and prolonging life; an American materia medica, instructing country gentlemen in the very important knowledge of the virtues and doses of our medicinal plants; also, a concise and impartial history of the capture of Washington, and the diseases which sprung from that most deplorable disaster

1896. Electricity, or ethereal fire, considered: 1st. naturally, as the agent of animal and vegetable life : 2d. astronomically, or as the agent of gravitation and motion : 3d. medically, or its artificial use in diseases : comprehending both the theory and practice of medical electricity : and demonstrated to be an infallible cure of fever, inflammation, and many other diseases : constituting the best family physician ever extant

1898. Observations on the advantages of exposing wounds to the air after capital operations: with some remarks upon the removal of scirrhus tumours from the breast : communicated in a letter to Samuel Bard, M.D., President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons

1899. Observations on the establishment of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in the City of New-York, and the late proceedings of the regents of the university, relative to that institution: communicated in a letter to James S. Stringham, M.D. professor of chemistry in Columbia College