Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . f nervous children in a school,the greater the tendency tQ lessen the general avarage of the whole. 11th. That nervous children possess in proportion more physicaldefects than all other pupils. 12th. That the nearer the pupil approaches the normal fixed standardin height, weight and other measurements, the greater his mental strengthand capacity for study. The Odoriferous Sense—Bleyer. 261 13th. That overmental stimulation dwarfs the mental and physicalpower and capacity by weakening the heart action, as evidenced by anaccelerated pulse-rate. 14th.


Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . f nervous children in a school,the greater the tendency tQ lessen the general avarage of the whole. 11th. That nervous children possess in proportion more physicaldefects than all other pupils. 12th. That the nearer the pupil approaches the normal fixed standardin height, weight and other measurements, the greater his mental strengthand capacity for study. The Odoriferous Sense—Bleyer. 261 13th. That overmental stimulation dwarfs the mental and physicalpower and capacity by weakening the heart action, as evidenced by anaccelerated pulse-rate. 14th. That the health of pupils, as well as their education, should besubject to the laws of physiology. (Riley.) A MEMOIR ON THE ODORIFEROUS SENSE. By J. Mount Bleyer, M. D., F. R. A. M. S., of New York City. [CONTINUED FROM APRIL ISSUE.] The nerves ramify so as to form flattened tufts, the filaments of which,spreading out laterally and communicating freely with similar offsets oneach side, form a close plexus with elongated and narrow Fig. VI. Nerves of the Septum Nasi Seen From the Right Side. (From Sappey, after Hirschfeld & Leveille.) I. The olfactory bulb; i, the olfactory nerves passing through the foramina of the cribriform plate, anddescending to be distributed on the septum; 2, the internal or septal twig of the nasal branch of the ophthal-mic nerve; 3, uaso-palatiue nerves. The structure of the olfactory nerve-fibers differs from the ordinarydark-bordered fibers of the cerebral and spinal nerves. They possess nomedullary sheath, but are axis-cylinders provided with a distinctnucleated sheath much more distinct than that of the fibers of Remak andwith nuclei at less frequent intervals. The greater part of the mucous membrane of the nasal channels isprovided also with nerves of common sensibility, derived from branchesof the fifth pair. According to recent discovery, each of these fibers most probably,approaching one of these cellules of the outer coating, fixes i


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublish, booksubjectmedicine