. The Pharmaceutical era. pply by a length of rubber tubing,which permits its being moved about and placed indifferent positions. Of gas stoves, many varieties exist, the particularform depending upon thepurpose for which they aremanufactured. In generalthey may be oaid to consistof a broad, flat base orframe of metal, and pro-vided with the means ofregulating both the supplyof gas and of air. (Fig. 27).All have the feature of theBunsen burner, whereby the gas is mixed with air beforecombustion. One very useful form for the dispensing counter isthe Fletcher patternfor the instanta-neous heatin
. The Pharmaceutical era. pply by a length of rubber tubing,which permits its being moved about and placed indifferent positions. Of gas stoves, many varieties exist, the particularform depending upon thepurpose for which they aremanufactured. In generalthey may be oaid to consistof a broad, flat base orframe of metal, and pro-vided with the means ofregulating both the supplyof gas and of air. (Fig. 27).All have the feature of theBunsen burner, whereby the gas is mixed with air beforecombustion. One very useful form for the dispensing counter isthe Fletcher patternfor the instanta-neous heating ofwater, consisting ofa coiled iron tube,over which a largegas flame is causedto play. (Fig. 28).The watei enters atthe bottom of thecoil, and by the timeit has reached thetop, where it is tobe drawn oft, isheated to the boilingpoint, B> this meansthe dispenser can al-ways command asupply of hot waterat a moments no-tice, without the ne-cessity of keeping itconstantly on the flre. j,,^ Water COMMON-SENSE VIEWS ON SECURING THE PATRONAGE AND SUPPORT OF PHYSICIANS.* BY CHARLES G. KLINE. The only way possible to secure and retain the phy-sicians support is to be a pharmacist in every sense ofthe word, and then to treat the physician in a common-sense sort of way. We will never secure it by keepingup a howl about the doctors dispensing. We mustrecognize the fact once and tor all time that they have alegal right to dispense all the medicine they want to intheir own pracice. They will always dispense moreor less as long as they live, the quantity depending verygreatly on how we treat them. We have no legal or moral right to prescribe unlesswe happen to have a medical diploma, and in that casethe other physicians would very likely want to patronizea druggist who is not an M. D. No sensible physicianobjects to our giving relief doses ior headache or colic,if we have sense and knowledge enough to give theproper thing; what they have a right to object to is
Size: 1387px × 1802px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectdrugs, booksubjectpharmacy, bookyear1