. Tri-State medical journal . n-isms, thus giving final quietus to theold doctrine of spontaneous genera-tion and preparing the way for Listersintroduction of antisepsis and asepsisinto surgery. From these researches,moreover, Pasteur developed varioustheories of fermentation and variousmethods of research, which haveproved of both commercial and scienti-fic importance. His discovery of thecause of silk-worm disease, and ofthe means of prevention, saved toFrance a valuable industry and open-ed a new vista in pathology, not yetfully explored. In his investigationsinto the cause of anthrax, and
. Tri-State medical journal . n-isms, thus giving final quietus to theold doctrine of spontaneous genera-tion and preparing the way for Listersintroduction of antisepsis and asepsisinto surgery. From these researches,moreover, Pasteur developed varioustheories of fermentation and variousmethods of research, which haveproved of both commercial and scienti-fic importance. His discovery of thecause of silk-worm disease, and ofthe means of prevention, saved toFrance a valuable industry and open-ed a new vista in pathology, not yetfully explored. In his investigationsinto the cause of anthrax, and his dis-covery of a means of rendering ani-mals immune against anthrax poison,and later in repeating similar re-searches as to chicken cholera, Pas-teur came into direct relation withmedicine and laid the foundation of modern pathology arid therapy. In hisresearches upon rabies, and in the method of treatment of persons bitten byrabid animals which is associated with his name, Pasteur was less fortunatethan in his other MEDALLION OF PASTEUR. In the Professional Eye. 439 ROBERT H. BABCOCK, A. M., M. D., was born in Watertown,New York State, July 26th, 1851, but was reared in Kalamazoo, the age of 13 he lost his sight as a result of an accident. After threeyears at the Institution for the Blind in Philadelphia, he took a preparatorycourse at Olivet, Michigan, and then entered Western Reserve College,Ohio, from which institution he has obtained both A. B. and A. M. In1874 he began the study of medicine at Ann Arbor, continuing portions oftwo winter terms, and in 1876 entered the Chicago Medical College, from
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade189, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear1895