Smithsonian miscellaneous collections . thedog in pyaemia, I have never seen the thermometer markhigher than 106°. In bringing this long lecture to a close, there are manythoughts in regard to pathological and especially therapeutical A STUDY OF FEVER. 45 subjects which I might ventm-e to bring before you, had I nottrespassed so much ou your patience : as it is, I must take leaveof you with the expression of the hope that some of you, havingbeen shown, at least, glimpses of truth new to you, will thinkand experiment, so as to aid in determining which, of the manythings that I have said to you


Smithsonian miscellaneous collections . thedog in pyaemia, I have never seen the thermometer markhigher than 106°. In bringing this long lecture to a close, there are manythoughts in regard to pathological and especially therapeutical A STUDY OF FEVER. 45 subjects which I might ventm-e to bring before you, had I nottrespassed so much ou your patience : as it is, I must take leaveof you with the expression of the hope that some of you, havingbeen shown, at least, glimpses of truth new to you, will thinkand experiment, so as to aid in determining which, of the manythings that I have said to you this evening in all honesty, aretrue and which are false; to the end that out of the labors ofmany minds the whole truth may at last be evolved. SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS. 300 THE TONER LECTURES IK8TITTJTED TO ENCOURAGE THE DISCOVERT OF NEW TRUTHSFOR THE ADVANCEMENT OP MEDICINE. Lecture V. ON THE SURGICAL COMPLICATIONS AND SEQUELS OFTHE CONTINUED FEVERS. WILLIAM W. KEEN, , OF PHILADELPHIA. DELIVERED FEBRUARY 17. WASHINGTON:SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. MARCH, 1S77. I ADVERTISEMENT. The Toner Lectures have been instituted at Washington,D. C, by Joseph M. Toner, , who has placed in charge ofa Board of Trustees, consisting of the Secretary of the Smith-sonian Institution, tlie Surgeon-General of the United StatesArmy, the Surgeoji-General of the United States Navy, andthe President of the Medical Society of the District of Colum-bia, a fund, the interest of which is to be applied for at leasttwo annual memoirs or essays relative to some branch of medi-cal science, and containing some new truth fully established byexperiment or observation. As these lectures are intended to increase and diffuse knowl-edge, they have been accepted for publication by the Smith-sonian Institution in its Miscellaneous Collections. The First Lecture of this series was delivered March 28,18T3, by Dr. J. J. Woodward, On the Structure of Cancer-ous Tumors and the Mode in which adjace


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