Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . d liquid taka-diastase, 8-ounce bottles only, 2 grains of the ferment toeach fluid drachm. In a recent circular Messrs. Parke, Davis & Company state: kk\Yehave introduced liquid taka-diastase to meet the demands of those whoobject to both powders and capsules. In order to satisfy such patients,we know of several instances where solutions have been prepared extem-poraneouslv, but with medicaments or vehicles with which taka-diastaseis incompatible. Of course, failure in such instances was unjustly attribu-ted to taka-diastase. Liquid taka-diastase wi


Tri-State medical journal and practitioner . d liquid taka-diastase, 8-ounce bottles only, 2 grains of the ferment toeach fluid drachm. In a recent circular Messrs. Parke, Davis & Company state: kk\Yehave introduced liquid taka-diastase to meet the demands of those whoobject to both powders and capsules. In order to satisfy such patients,we know of several instances where solutions have been prepared extem-poraneouslv, but with medicaments or vehicles with which taka-diastaseis incompatible. Of course, failure in such instances was unjustly attribu-ted to taka-diastase. Liquid taka-diastase will in future, however, mostsatisfactorily take care of all such cases. Under no circumstances should taka-diastase be massed. It shouldbe administered either in powders, in capsules, or the liquid form, andduring or immediately after meals. If not already familiar with taka-diastase, write the^ manufacturers atonce for monographs, reports of cases, reprints of articles, etc. Taka-diastase is certainly the remedy in amylaceous Dk. a. h. ohmann ih-mksxii,. President of the St. Louis Academy of Medical and Surgical Sciences. Abstacts. 623 ABSTRACTS. Disinfection by Formaldehyde Vapor.—If one may trust the reports ofcareful observers in Europe and America, and may judge from a limitedpersonal experience unchecked by laboratory investigations, the problemof disinfection of apartments and their contents, during and after theiroccupancy by patients having contagious diseases, has at length beensolved. Dr. Hans Aronson {Zeitschrift fuer Hygiene and InfectionsKrankheiten, Vol. XXV., June, 1897) summarizes investigations to dateupon the antiseptic properties of formaldehyde, and recounts new experi-ments tending to confirm his original researches. Various methods of dis-infection by utilizing the penetrating powers of formaldehyde gas upon alarge scale have been proposed. Aronson finds most of them objection-able, including in this category all attempts at vaporization by m


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