. Annals of medical history. tedas easily to admit two fingers. Perhaps it sohappened that because of this dilatation of itspelvis, the stones formed in the kidney passedpresently into the bladder and were expelledthence, a thing which my good friend manytimes told me had happened during his the urinary bladder was a small stone whichby its descent four days before his final apoplexy, had aggravated his last attacks ofvertigo. The rest of the viscera were quitenormal. When I opened his head I found in the cavityof the right cerebral ventricle about two ouncesof black clotted blood


. Annals of medical history. tedas easily to admit two fingers. Perhaps it sohappened that because of this dilatation of itspelvis, the stones formed in the kidney passedpresently into the bladder and were expelledthence, a thing which my good friend manytimes told me had happened during his the urinary bladder was a small stone whichby its descent four days before his final apoplexy, had aggravated his last attacks ofvertigo. The rest of the viscera were quitenormal. When I opened his head I found in the cavityof the right cerebral ventricle about two ouncesof black clotted blood which was the cause ofhis apoplexy and his death. In the left cerebralventricle was about an ounce and a half ofyellowish fluid intermixed with a small quantityof little grains of sand. The blood-vessels of thebrain were everywhere dilated (undequaquevaricosa). The whole dura mater was firmly andabnormally adherent to the skull. And these arethe things that I observed when dissecting hisbody on the Kalends of December, Apud Guilielmum RouiJIium, sub scuto Veneto M. D. LXXXVI. A CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CURE IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY^INTRODUCING THE READER INTO VERY HIGH SOCIETY By HORACE MANCHESTER BROWN, MILWAUKEE, WIS. Scilicet.—Two popes, one cardinal, one prefect of the Carmelites, a commissioner of tlie HolyOffice of the Inquisition, a number of damsels who were uncertain as to what they needed, anAfrican woman familiar with devils, a youth, a widow, seventeen devils four by name, an earthencrock, a credulous philosopher with a remarkable sense of hearing, and certain lewd fellowsof the baser sort. IN cases of disease, the doctor ought,in looking for a cause for the trouble,to consider even the most obscure;not only those that are within thebody, and that are natural, but also to fearand look about for those which are beyondthe method and art of medicine, especiallywhen the natural remedies are found to beof no use; and when he must consider thedisease which does not


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidannal, booksubjectmedicine