. American journal of pharmacy. plex problem of regularly furnishing themedicines and surgical supplies for all of the sanitary formations,some other researches have been carried on and a number of sug-gestions of importance to the industries of the nation have emanatedfrom this corps. Withal there has been no abatement of the rigidrules of administration and the strict methods of making recordsand the rendering of surgical assistance as well as purely pharma-ceutical service. The writer is indebted to L. Guignard for the accompanyingdiagram which graphically portrays the service that the phar


. American journal of pharmacy. plex problem of regularly furnishing themedicines and surgical supplies for all of the sanitary formations,some other researches have been carried on and a number of sug-gestions of importance to the industries of the nation have emanatedfrom this corps. Withal there has been no abatement of the rigidrules of administration and the strict methods of making recordsand the rendering of surgical assistance as well as purely pharma-ceutical service. The writer is indebted to L. Guignard for the accompanyingdiagram which graphically portrays the service that the pharma-ceutical corps of the French army is rendering to that nation. The preface to the able work of Major Leon Varenne waswritten by Prof. P. Cazeneuve, senator from Rhone. It is a con-cise review of the service being performed by the military pharma-cists. He pays a deserved tribute to their devotion and patrioticservice, although silently given, to which the historian must in jus- o — iif Si o < 5 z 5* 55S| S S|5^ 5 ii-J I. X u< ?- I la 2 C 0 r- Pio o-s -t Z o,. tt^ ^r J^2 ^$ ?>? »2 oc v«n Vr f ^ o°5 C kJ r o uo— 1^ so a — <v^ ^<- 4 _l czG Pharviaccutical Service. / Am. jour. Pharm. 5-^ *? November, 1917. tice render homage. He states this work of M. Varenne makesus love and respect this select corps which have contributed, in theirmodest sphere, most eminent service to save the country. No onereading even the preface of this book should longer doubt the of the pharmaceutical corps in modern warfare and theabsolute necessity for such service to protect the health and livesof the troops. PHARMACISTS AND THE WAR. ^ By H. M. Whelplev, , St. Louis, Mo. (Read at the 1917 meeting of the Missouri Pharmaceutical Association.) Twelve months ago WC met here and expressed privately ouropinions of the human slaughter then going on in the old then, the war cloud has extended until it is now easier to namethe countries that are at peace


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookidamerica, booksubjectpharmacy, bookyear1829