Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . a Med-ical Journal and the Tri-State Medical Journal and was the result? Last year the school had nearly one hundred stu-dents. This year it has less than fifty. Perhaps in another year it willbe ausgespielt. The Iowa profession is all right. It has no use for fraud, hypocrisy, deceit or vulgarity. 512 Our Book Table. ACADEMICAL NOTES. The St. Louis Academy of Medical and Surgical Sciences met Sep-tember 28th, and listened to a paper by Dr. M. F. Engman, Lecturer onDermatology in the Marion-Sims College of Medicine. The paper ispri


Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . a Med-ical Journal and the Tri-State Medical Journal and was the result? Last year the school had nearly one hundred stu-dents. This year it has less than fifty. Perhaps in another year it willbe ausgespielt. The Iowa profession is all right. It has no use for fraud, hypocrisy, deceit or vulgarity. 512 Our Book Table. ACADEMICAL NOTES. The St. Louis Academy of Medical and Surgical Sciences met Sep-tember 28th, and listened to a paper by Dr. M. F. Engman, Lecturer onDermatology in the Marion-Sims College of Medicine. The paper isprinted elsewhere in this months Journal. No meeting was held October 5th, owing to the visit of the VeiledProphet. At the meeting of October 12th, Dr. A. H. Ohmann-Dumesnil read apaper entitled Phagedenic Chancroid. Dr. Hugo Summa, by request,demonstrated some pathological specimens obtained at the City George F. Hulbert presented an interesting specimen. The application of Dr. Eugman was voted on and he was elected About Children. — Six Lectures given to the Nurses in the Training School ofthe Cleveland General Hospital, in February, 1896. By Samuel , M. D., Professor of Diseases of Children in the ClevelandCollege of Physicians and Surgeons. Octavo, pp. 179. Cleveland:Medical Gazette Publishing Co., 1897. Although delivered to nurses, this little book contains much of practi-cal value to the physician. The lectures have been prepared with greatcare and are models of clearness. The reader will not be in doubt as tothe authors meaning. We expect a large sale for Dr. Kellys book. Typhoid Fever and Its Abortive Treatment.—By John ELIOT Woodbridge,M. D. Second Edition, Octavo, pp. 368. Cleveland: author has been prominently before the profession for severalyears as an advocate of the abortive treatment of typhoid fever. Theauthor says: The book has been written in defiance of the opinions ofthe bacteriologist, who has demonstrated the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublish, booksubjectmedicine