Similia : the 1910 yearbook of the Hahnemann Medical College . un, for if we would be successful we must beconstantly reading, experimenting, and investigating to find out something better than we now know. Take up the fight for vivisection. Its offspring, sero-therapy saves many valuable lives in a year whichwould be lost. It is in its infancy, and in the near future we shall see serums elaborated which will act onother diseases in as satisfactory a manner as the well known Diphtheria Antitoxin and Tuberculin do in theirparticular spheres. The future of any institution depends upon the gradua


Similia : the 1910 yearbook of the Hahnemann Medical College . un, for if we would be successful we must beconstantly reading, experimenting, and investigating to find out something better than we now know. Take up the fight for vivisection. Its offspring, sero-therapy saves many valuable lives in a year whichwould be lost. It is in its infancy, and in the near future we shall see serums elaborated which will act onother diseases in as satisfactory a manner as the well known Diphtheria Antitoxin and Tuberculin do in theirparticular spheres. The future of any institution depends upon the graduates it sends out; we must do our part to keep upthe reputation of this college; we must strive hard to come up to the high standard set for us by former stu-dens and graduates. Each one of us has in his make-up some special talent or gift suited to the practice ofmedicine; let us study it, foster it, and cultivate it so that it may win triumph for us and so redound to theglory of our Alma Mater that she shall be proud of her Sons of Nineteen Hundred and (ElasH nf 1911 Ollasfl Wtrrrs /resident— and Treasurer—Burdsall. / ice-President—Plum mkk. Editor—Powell. OX the 25th day of September, 1907, there was gathered together for the first time, in the halls ofold Hahnemann, a group of eager, earnest, and ambitious young men. Although, unknown to eachOther, unknown to the college, strangers in a strange land, this body of men was united by a com-mon hand of fellowship, the desire to obtain a scientific knowledge of the Practice of memories, amusing and otherwise, are recalled to mind, as one muses over the history of this classof men, during the past three years. Who will ever forget that memorable day when Golderg, Stackhouseand Vedder, garbed in baby clothes, with rattle and bottle in hand, were packed closely into a baby carriageand hauled through the streets of old Philadelphia—heroic martyrs to the cause of initiation and sacrifices


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecthahnema, bookyear1910