Letters from foreign lands . e-ment for which the world is indebted to was the devising of the Hodgensplint by J. T. Hodgen. It revolutionizedthe method of caring for hip and thighfractures. In medicine, botany and meteor-ology G. Knglemann brought honor to theprofession. As the one thorough pioneerbotanist of the West, and as the earliest ofAmerican students of meteorology hegreatly aided phylogenetic botany and wasthe forerunner of Old Prob. To we are indebted for medical electro-lysis which he employed successfully inconnection with the eye, while Hardawaydeveloped its use


Letters from foreign lands . e-ment for which the world is indebted to was the devising of the Hodgensplint by J. T. Hodgen. It revolutionizedthe method of caring for hip and thighfractures. In medicine, botany and meteor-ology G. Knglemann brought honor to theprofession. As the one thorough pioneerbotanist of the West, and as the earliest ofAmerican students of meteorology hegreatly aided phylogenetic botany and wasthe forerunner of Old Prob. To we are indebted for medical electro-lysis which he employed successfully inconnection with the eye, while Hardawaydeveloped its use in dermatology. To Switt must be credited some recent 185 knowledge of eye defects in children, neu-roses of childhood, and the bearings ofpsychology on heredity. To E. P. Lyonwe owe recent knowledge concerning phy-siological compensatory motions, tropismsin cell functioning, the cyanides and oxy-gen respiration, and the effects of lack ofoxygen. H. von Schrenk has advanced ourknowledge of phyto-pathology. As an early. J. T. HODGEN, M. D.


Size: 1351px × 1849px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectphysicians, bookyear1