Spinal disease and spinal curvature : their treatment by suspension and the use of the plaster of Paris bandage . ier symptoms, and the mode ofexamination which I have endea-voured to illustrate in the earlierpart of this work, would rendersuch an error almost impossible. I quote the mothers letterentire, as it is a typical history ofthe majority of such cases, merelyomitting the names of the medi-cal gentlemen refeiTed to :— L. Boyle, No. 19 East 46th St.,New York, May 14, 1876. * Dt. Sayre: Dear Sir,—According to pro-mise I will try to give you amiaute detail of the illness andtreatment of m


Spinal disease and spinal curvature : their treatment by suspension and the use of the plaster of Paris bandage . ier symptoms, and the mode ofexamination which I have endea-voured to illustrate in the earlierpart of this work, would rendersuch an error almost impossible. I quote the mothers letterentire, as it is a typical history ofthe majority of such cases, merelyomitting the names of the medi-cal gentlemen refeiTed to :— L. Boyle, No. 19 East 46th St.,New York, May 14, 1876. * Dt. Sayre: Dear Sir,—According to pro-mise I will try to give you amiaute detail of the illness andtreatment of my little girl up tothe present time. Florence Boyle is the second child of Wilbur F. and Fannie of St. Louis, Mo. The parents and grandparents were TREATMENT OF CASES. 55 particularly free from any bone or blood diseases. The other twochildren are unusually stout and healthy. Up to the time of herinjury I never saw a more active, stout, healthy child. When shewas two years and three months of age, on July 4, 1868, whileplaying on the stoop, she fell one step, and I think she fell across Fig. B4. Fig.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookpublisherlondonsmithelderco