Jornais Acesso aberto

Explanation of the Plate

1803; Gale Group; Linguagem: English

Autores

Dr. Joseph Comstock, John Stevens, Mr. William Bartram, James Mease, Dr. Joshua E. White, James Woodhouse, Philip Syng Physick, Benjamin Smith Barton, E. A. Holyoke,

Resumo

Essay: Foreign Chemical Agency of the Two Electricities, Commerce of the United States with Foreign Parts in Sea-Salt, Ornamental Forest Trees, Lectures on Medical and Operative Surgery, Case of Suppression of Urine, in Which a Gum-Elastic Catheter, with a Bougie-Point, Was Used with Success: Together with Experiments on the Treatment of Gum-Elastic by Spirit of Turpentine and Ether: Communicated in a Letter from Philip Syng Physick, M. D. of Philadelphia, to Dr. Miller, American Botany, Means by Which Diseases from Hard Drinking and Venereal Virus Are Promoted, Exotic Plants Naturalized to the West-Indies, Remarkable Phenomena of the Late Spring of 1803, Elements of Botany; or Outlines of the Natural History of Vegetables. Illustrated by Thirty Plates. By Benjamin Smith Barton, M. D. Professor of Materia Medica, Natural History and Botany, in the University of Pennsylvania. 8vo. Philadelphia. Printed for the Author. 1803, The Most Obvious Characters Which Distinguish the Grape-Vines of America from Those of the Old Continent, Are, 1, Explanation of the Plate, The Town and Country Friend and Physician; or an Affectionate Address on the Preservation of Health, and the Removal of Disease on Its First Appearance: Supposed to Be Delivered by a Country Physician to the Circle of His Friends and Patients on His Retiring from Business. With Some Cursory Observations on the Treatment of Children, &c. 18mo. Pp. 108. Philadelphia. J. Humphreys. 1803, Medical & Philosophical News Domestic, Observations on the Plant Called Bone-Set, and on Other Species of Eupatorium, Tending to Evince Their Anti-Venomous Qualities. By John Stevens, Esq. ofHobocken. Communicated to Dr. Mitchill, in a Letter Dated July 5, 1803, History of the Oleates of Alkalies, or Soaps, Prize Questions, Massachusetts Academy, Reflections, Account of a Case of Fistula Lachrymalis; with Reflections on the Different Modes of Operating in That Disease: Communicated in a Letter from Dr. Chatard, of Baltimore, (Maryland) to Dr. Miller, Further Ravages of the Wheat-Insect, or Tipula Tritici of America, and of Another Species of Tipula in Europe, Case of Aneurism: Communicated by Dr. Joshua E. White, of Waynesborough (Georgia), to Dr. David Ramsay, of Charleston (S. C.), Phosphoric Acid Found among Pot-Ash at the Manufactories, with the Proper Remedy, Facts to Prove the Local Generation of Pestilential Poison on Board a British Ship in the Harbour of New-York, in the Month of July, 1803, Lofling's American Manuscripts, Medical Commencement, A Case of Very Singular Nervous Affections, Supposed to Have Been Occasioned by the Bite of a Tarantula. By Dr. Joseph Comstock, of South-Kingston (R. I.) Addressed to Dr. A. C. Willey, of Block-Island, in a Letter Dated January 24, 1803. Frontmatter: Medical Repository. Letter to the editor: Account of the Species, Hybrids, and Other Varieties of the Vine of North-America. By Mr. William Bartram, of Pennsylvania To the Editors of the Medical Repository, Additional Observations on the Subterranean Minerals near the Yadkin, and on Their Basaltic Nature. By James Woodhouse, M. D. and Professor of Chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania: Addressed to the Editors of the Medical Repository, July 14, 1803. Review: Review Papers on Agriculture; Consisting of Communications Made to the Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agriculture.

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