Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey . ,000 a year. Child Health Exposition in France. Paris. October 10.—The American Red Health Exposition, which has beentouring the larger cities of Devastated Francesince May. closed its season this week atValenciennes. During the past five months, ithas shown for periods of two to three weeksin six French cities. Lille, Roubaix. ,Cambrai, Douai and Valenciennes, besides amonth in Paris. The attendance at the Expo-sition has averaged about 5,000 persms daily. Every feature in the rearing of children ac-cording to the soujidest
Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey . ,000 a year. Child Health Exposition in France. Paris. October 10.—The American Red Health Exposition, which has beentouring the larger cities of Devastated Francesince May. closed its season this week atValenciennes. During the past five months, ithas shown for periods of two to three weeksin six French cities. Lille, Roubaix. ,Cambrai, Douai and Valenciennes, besides amonth in Paris. The attendance at the Expo-sition has averaged about 5,000 persms daily. Every feature in the rearing of children ac-cording to the soujidest and most approvedmethods M^as shown in the exhibition. SeveralFrench and American organizations joinedwith the American Red Cross in providing thevarious specialized departments. The Ameri-can Committee for Devastated France, theBordeaux Training School for Nurses, theFrench Red Cross, and the Jardin des Enfants,were among the co-operating organizations. 33 Journalof The Medical Society of New Jersey Published onthe First Day of Every Month. Under the Directionof the Committee on Publicatioo Vol. XIX, No. 2 ORANGE, N. J., FEB., 1922 Subscription. per Year Sineie Copies. 25 Cents IMPORTANCE OF CAREFUL DIAS-TOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE OB-SERVATIONS IN CARDIACAND CARDIO-RENAL DIS-EASES : WITH RE-PORT OF CASES* By Clarence L. Andrews, BJ5., , Atlantic City, N. J. The more we approach the depths ofscientific medicine in its truest senseand the more the many tests and analysesof clinical, physiological and pathologi-cal anatomy become clearified, the moreevident it becomes to us that there are noseparate systems of the body as such, butthat each is so intricately inter-relatedwith some other portion of the body eith-er anatomically or physiologically, thathe who centers upon any one method ofdiagnosis as being a short cut to diseaseor a royal road to treatment, shall behopelessly lost. Pharaphrasing the ex-pression that there is no short cut toGodliness—neither do I think there is a
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear192