. International record of medicine . The primary coil consists of layers of No. 25 copper wire. The secondary coil consists of fourteen layers of No. 36 copperwire. The four chloride-of-silver cells are connected, two in multiple arcand two in series. The vibrator makes a sliding connection, changing the point of co-aptation, thereby cleaning itself. The case is neatly covered with Russia leather. It is particularly serviceable to any one who makes use of electricityto any great extent outside of his ofiice, either for diagnosis or fortreatment. The muscular contractions produced are powe


. International record of medicine . The primary coil consists of layers of No. 25 copper wire. The secondary coil consists of fourteen layers of No. 36 copperwire. The four chloride-of-silver cells are connected, two in multiple arcand two in series. The vibrator makes a sliding connection, changing the point of co-aptation, thereby cleaning itself. The case is neatly covered with Russia leather. It is particularly serviceable to any one who makes use of electricityto any great extent outside of his ofiice, either for diagnosis or fortreatment. The muscular contractions produced are powerful. Rheo-phores and electrodes are carried in the hand-bag and not in the bat-. tery itself. For neurological diagnosis, the best interrupting handlesare undoubtedly those made by J. C. Vetter & Co., of 214 East Forty-seventh Street, because of their practical design and the satisfactoryflexibility of their springs. They have just made for me an interruptinghandle (Fig. 2) of very small size—2^ inches in length—which is ex-ceedingly convenient for the pocket or hand-bag. i s c 111 a It 1). On Some Diseases of Plants compared with those of Man.—Thiswas the title of an address delivered at the opening of the Section ofMedicine at the recent annual meeting of the British Medical Associa-tion, by W. H. Ransom, M. D., F. R. S., F. R. C. P., Consulting Physicianto the General Hospital, Nottingham. After a few introductory remarks Dr. Ransom, for advance proofsof whose address we are indebted to the British Medical Journal, said: I shall not touch upon those plant diseases which correspond togeneral disorders of circulation and nutrition in animals, nor upon t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear186