Jornais Acesso aberto

Medical Repository

0000; Gale Group; Linguagem: English

Autores

Jeremiah Barker, A. J. De Rosset, Hugh Williamson, Dr. James Stratton, John MacLean, J. Priestley, J. Priestley, E. H. Smith, Isaac Chapman, William Dewees, Louis Valentin, Benjamin Rush, Thomas P. Smith, Thomas Horsfield, John Archer, James Stuart, Samuel L. Mitchill, E. H. Smith, Samuel L. Mitchill, Issac Rand, John Warren, J. Miller,

Resumo

Frontmatter: Medical Repository. Essay: On the Disappearance of Swallows in Autumn: in a Letter from Mr. Peter Cole to Dr. Mitchill, Dated New-York, September 25,1798, An Inaugural Dissertation on the Salutary Effects of Mercury in Malignant Fevers. By James Stuart. Philadelphia. Bradford. 8vo. Pp. 37. 1798, An Account of the Pestilential Fever Which Prevailed at Wilmington, North-Carolina, in 1796; in a Letter to Dr. Miller. By A. J. De Rosset, M. D., Observations on the Use of the Warm Bath, in Cases of Laborious Parturition: Communicated in a Letter from Dr. William Dewees, Lecturer on Midwifery in Philadelphia, to Dr. E. H. Smith, We Are Happy to Announce, That Mr. Webster's History of Pestilential Diseases Will Be Put to Press in the Course of Next Month, Foreign, Dr. Priestley on Red Precipitate of Mercury, as Favourable to the Doctrine of Phlogiston; in a Letter to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Northumberland, July 20,1798, In August and September, 1797, I Visited, Repeatedly, in Company with Dr. Mitchill, Dr. Miller, Mr. Dunlap, and Other Gentlemen of My Acquaintance, Four Elks, Then Exhibited in This City for Gain, Foreign The Following Important Account of a New Publication in Great-Britain, by Dr. Jenner, Entitled," an Inquiry …, The Celebrated Professor Spallanzani, Having Observed That Certain Species of Bats Appeared to Be Able to Direct Their Flight in a Room Perfectly Dark as Well as in the Light, Has Made Several Truly Barbarous Experiments on This Subject, Concerning the Elk, Answer to the Question, Whether Any, and What, Effect Is to Be Attributed to the Greater or Lesser Quantity of Variolous Matter, Introduced into the System by Inoculation, &c. By Louis Valentin, Officer of Health of the First Class, and Lately in Chief of the French Hospitals in Virginia—A Fellow of Many Academies, On the Febrifuge Virtues of Lime, Magnesia, and Alkaline Salts in Dysentery, Yellow Fever, and Scarlatina Anginosa. In a Letter from Dr. Jeremiah Barker, of Portland (Maine), to Dr. Mitchill, Dated May 30,1798, A Sketch of the Revolutions in Chemistry. By Thomas P. Smith. Philadelphia. Smith. 1798. Pp. 40. 8vo., The Following Physicians Also Died of the Late Prevailing Sickness in This City, Singular Termination of an Omental Hernia; Communicated in a Letter to Dr. Mitchill, by Dr. James Stratton, of Swedesburgh, New-Jersey, Dated July 2,1798, Sept. 19,1798, Elihu Hubbard Smith, Physician, One of the Editors of This Work, Aged 27 Years, On the Ill Effects of Blood-Letting in Putrid Bilious Fevers and Pneumonia Typhoides, as They Appear in North-Carolina; in a Letter to Dr. David Hosack, by Hugh Williamson, M. D. &c., Objections to the Antiphlogistic Doctrine of Water; by Dr. Priestley: in a Letter to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Northumberland, August 23,1798, On the Effects of Oil in Cases of the Bite of Serpents; Republished from the Charleston (South-Carolina) City Gazette, An Inaugural Dissertation on Cynanche Trachealis, Commonly Called Croup or Hives. By John Archer, Jun. Philadelphia. Way and Groff. 8vo. Pp. 46. 1798, Cure of Chancre from Venereal Contagion by Alkalies, In the Monthly Magazine for August of the Present Year, We Find the Following Notice Concerning Dr. Beddoes's Long Expected Work, French Aërostation, Professor Maclean against the Doctrine of Phlogiston; in a Letter to Dr. Mitchill, Dated College of New-Jersey, 16th July, 1798, A New Variety of Iron-Ore of the Argillaceous Kind, and Resembling Basaltes, Multiple Essay Items, The Following Account of Dissections of Bodies Dead of the Late Malignant Epidemic at Boston, Is so Interesting, That We Think Proper to Republish It, A Committee of the Medical Society of New-York, Consisting of Messrs. Tillary, Rodgers and Mitchill, Were Chosen at a Meeting of That Body, Lately Held, for Investigating the Origin, Cause and Prevention of the Pestilential Distempers Which so Terribly Afflict New-York, and the Other Cities and Towns in the United States, An Account of a Species of Cantharis, Found in Buck's County, Pennsylvania; Including Observations on Its Medical Qulities. By Isaac Chapman, Physician, An Experimental Dissertation on the Rhus Vernix, Rhus Radicans, and Rhus Glabrum, Commonly Known, in Pennsylvania, by the Names of Poison-Ash, Poison-Vine, and Common Sumach. By Thomas Horsfield, of Bethlem, &c. Pp. 88. 8vo. Philadelphia. Cist. 1798, On Septon (Azote) and Its Compounds, as They Operate on Plants as Food, and on Animals as Poison: Intended as a Supplement to Mr. Kirwan's Pamphlet on Manures. In a Letter to the Rev. Dr. Henry Muhlenberg, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, from Mr. Mitchill, of New-York, Dated October 24,1796, As Connected with This Subject, We Notice the Following Case, Medical and Philosophical News Domestic, Appendix Domestic, Mineralogy. Review: Review Medical Inquiries and Observations: Containing an Account of the Yellow Fever, as It Appeared in Philadelphia. Obituary: I. B. Scandella, M. D..

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