A reference handbook of the medical sciences, embracing the entire range of scientific and practical medicine and allied science . its combined demulcent and tonicactions. Dose, indefinite; a decoction is official. Cetrarin is given alone for all except the demulcentproperties, in doses of gr. jss-iij (). Henht H. Rdsby. Chaille, Stanford Emerson.—Born July 9, , inNatcliez, Mississippi; his father was of Frenchdescent. He received his academic education atHarvard College (class of 1851), and immediatelyafterward began the study of medicine at the Uni-versity of Louisiana (subsequen


A reference handbook of the medical sciences, embracing the entire range of scientific and practical medicine and allied science . its combined demulcent and tonicactions. Dose, indefinite; a decoction is official. Cetrarin is given alone for all except the demulcentproperties, in doses of gr. jss-iij (). Henht H. Rdsby. Chaille, Stanford Emerson.—Born July 9, , inNatcliez, Mississippi; his father was of Frenchdescent. He received his academic education atHarvard College (class of 1851), and immediatelyafterward began the study of medicine at the Uni-versity of Louisiana (subsequently named the TulaneUniversity, Louisiana). This institution gave him thedegree of Doctor of Medicine in and his asso-ciation with the university, thus begun, continued tothe end of his long life. In 1858 he was appointeddemonstrator of anatomy; in 1867 he was called tothe chair of physiology and pathological anatomyand soon thereafter was made Dean of the MedicalDepartment, which position he held uninterruptedlyuntil 190S when he retired with the title of ProfessorEmeritus. In preparation for his professional duties. Fig. -Stanford EmersonChaiI16. he studied physiology (ISOO-lSGl), in the laboratoryof tlie eminent French teacher and investigator,Claude Bernard. Soon after tlie breaking out ofthe Civil War he returned to New Orleans andentered the Confeder-ate Army. After fouryears of service in dif-ferent parts of theSouth—first as a pri-vate soldier, afterwardas Surgeon-General ofLouisiana, and finallyas surgeon in charge ofvarious army hos|)itals—he was captured andparoled. This was inSeptember, 1865, anda few months later liereturned to Paris toresume his studies un-der Bernard. In 1867he came back to NowOrleans and began hislectures at the Uni-versity. He was forseveral years one ofthe editors of the \ew Orleans Medical and SurgicalJotirnnl. He died May 27, 1911. Of the numerous contributions which Chaille madeto medical literature tlie following


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbuckalbe, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913