Bulletin of the Lloyd Library of Botany, Pharmacy and Materia Medica, Ausgaben 1-5Lloyd Library and Museum., 1900 |
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Seite 5
... bitter and pungent . * THE large tuberous roots of the Smilax China afford our southern Indians a nourishing food . The fresh roots are well macerated in wooden mor- tars . The mass is then put into vessels nearly filled with clear ...
... bitter and pungent . * THE large tuberous roots of the Smilax China afford our southern Indians a nourishing food . The fresh roots are well macerated in wooden mor- tars . The mass is then put into vessels nearly filled with clear ...
Seite 10
... bitter medicines , as the gentians , & c . The natural in- firmities of mankind , and perhaps especially the vices to which civilized nations are so propense , will always render the tonics most necessary imple- ments in the hands of ...
... bitter medicines , as the gentians , & c . The natural in- firmities of mankind , and perhaps especially the vices to which civilized nations are so propense , will always render the tonics most necessary imple- ments in the hands of ...
Seite 14
... bitter medicine . It has been used in intermittent fevers . The flow- ers have a powerful and to most persons an agreea- ble smell . It is an emanation which must be con- sidered as a potent stimulant , or incitant . I am well ...
... bitter medicine . It has been used in intermittent fevers . The flow- ers have a powerful and to most persons an agreea- ble smell . It is an emanation which must be con- sidered as a potent stimulant , or incitant . I am well ...
Seite 15
... bitters . It is certainly a valuable medicine , in the second stage of certain fevers , after the inflammatory diathesis has been removed . It was used with great benefit , in a most malignant fever , attended with carbuncles , which ...
... bitters . It is certainly a valuable medicine , in the second stage of certain fevers , after the inflammatory diathesis has been removed . It was used with great benefit , in a most malignant fever , attended with carbuncles , which ...
Seite 16
... bitter plants of Europe , which have long claimed the attention of physicians . Our Gentians have not been carefully examined . We have one species which appears to be equal to any of the officinal kinds yet known . SECT . III ...
... bitter plants of Europe , which have long claimed the attention of physicians . Our Gentians have not been carefully examined . We have one species which appears to be equal to any of the officinal kinds yet known . SECT . III ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acid alcohol anthelmintic applied astringent Barton Benjamin Smith Barton bite bitter black snake root blood body boiling Botany Burt called calomel capillary action capillary rise capillary tubes Chem Chim cohesion cold water Columbo common Comptes Rendus constant of capillarity cure debility decoction diffusion disease diuretic dose drink drop effect emetic employed experiments fever film fluid Flüssigkeiten Gilb give height herb Herbst increase Indians Ipecacuanha Langlois leaves Linnæus liquid LLOYD LIBRARY lungs Materia Medica medicine meniscus mentioned Mercury molecular observed ointment pain patient Patouillard Peck Pennsylvania person Peruvian bark phenomena phenomenon Phil Phys physicians pills pint plant plates pleurisy Pogg Polygala Senega properties purge quantity remedy Rhus Rhus radicans rise salt snake root solutions sore species stalk stomach surface tension taste teaspoonful temperature theory tion tonic Ueber ulcers United-States vegetable Virginia worms
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 48 - An Act for the encouragement of Learning, by securing the Copies of Maps, Charts and Books, to the Authors and Proprietors of such Copies, during the times therein mentioned, and extending the Benefits thereof to the arts of Designing, Engraving and Etching Historical and other Prints.
Seite 3 - London ; | and | Professor of Materia Medica, Natural History and Botany, | in the | University of Pennsylvania.
Seite 25 - ... perceived a swelling in the axillary gland of the right arm, which was that to which the lacteous juice was applied, and which was chiefly affected. The swelling rapidly increased until it became of the size of a hen's egg, and on the second day from its appearance it had almost entirely vanished. " From the period that the swelling was at its height, to its entire disappearance, the itching was almost universal, and much more insupportable than it was before. I attributed this itching to the...
Seite 47 - MD President of the Philadelphia Linnean" and Medical Societies; one of the VicePresidents of the American Philosophical Society! Member of the Imperial Society of Naturalists at Moscow in Russia; and Professor of Materia Medica, Natural History, and Botany, in the University of Pennsylvania.