Medical Repository
1803; Gale Group; Linguagem: English
Autores
M. De Carendeffez, James S. Stringham, Thomas Dancer, Charles W. Peale, William Barnwell, Robert Graves, George Tucker, Lyman Spalding, John Addington, N. Webster,
ResumoFrontmatter: Medical Repository. Essay: Mirror of the Incas, Slate-Quarry on the West Bank of the Hudson, Facts Concerning American Pot-Ash, MacKenzie's Discoveries in American Geography, Bright Meteors, Spanish American Maps, Illustrations of the Spoiling of Beef, Pork, and Butter, When Cured with Liverpool Salt; and of the Fevers Excited Thereby, as Those Corrupting Articles Act Directly upon the Stomach and Intestines, and through the Medium of the Atmosphere upon Other Parts of the Body, in Private Houses, in Ships, and in Cities. In a Letter from Dr. Mitchill to Charles Caldwell, M. D. &c. Dated Washington, Oct. 22, C1803. (See Page 83 for Other Facts on Sea-Salt, and for a View of the Trade of the United States with Foreign Parts in That Commodity), Additional Observations on the Nature of Fever, and on the Importance of Remedies Applied to the Skin. In a Letter from Noah Webster, Esq. to Dr. Miller, Dated New-Haven, Oct. 3, 1803, Epitome of Practical Galvanism, Foreign A Comparative View of the Natural Small-Pox, Inoculated Small-Pox, and Inoculated Cow-Pox, History of Paraguay and Florida, Acidity of Disorganized Animal Matter in Certain Cases, The Accomack Pea, A Case of Extra-Uterine Fœtus, with Some Observations on the Subject Generally. In a Letter from David Ramsay, M. D. to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Charleston (S. C.), Sept. 1, 1803, Mode of Preventing Iron and Steel from Rusting, Native Gold Discovered in North-Carolina, Thiery De Menonville's Voyage to Guaxaca, to Smuggle the Cochineal Plant and Insect to St. Domingo, Register of the Weather at Esopus, 120 Miles North of the City of New-York, Maps of Massachusetts and Maine, Copy of a Letter from Mr. David Brown, Assistant Surgeon to the 60th Regiment, Up-Park Camp, to Dr. Dancer, An Epistle to a Friend on the Means of Preserving Health, Promoting Happiness, and Prolonging the Life of Man to Its Natural Period. By Charles W. Peale. 8vo. Pp. 48. Philadelphia. Aitken. 1803, Barberries Not Prejudicial to the Growth of Wheat, New-York Hospital Returns for 1802-3, Pot-Ash Obtained from Buckwheat, Bartram's History of the Carolina Moss, Used for Stuffing Matrasses, Medical & Philosophical News Domestic, Meteoric Stone, Culture of the Tree Called Le Robinier (Robinia Pseudacacia. Lin.), We Are Glad to Have It in Our Power to Announce That a Second Part of Professor Barton's "Collections for an Essay Towards a Materia Medica of the United States," Has Been Some Time in the Press, and May Be Expected Speedily to Be Published, Lead, Iron and Tin Mines in the Western Country, Additional Evidence in Support of "The Utility of Occasional Blood-Letting in the Pregnant State of Disease." by Dr. Vaughan, of Wilmington, (Del.) in a Letter to Dr. Mitchill, Dated Dec. 2, 1803. [See Hex. I. Vol. vi. P. 31, 150] Case I, Method of Obtaining Prussic Acid in a Pure State, Curious Facts Concerning a Drift and Current in the Atlantic Ocean, Description of a Cavern in Ulster County, in the State of New-York, Remarkable Symptoms Consequent upon an Injury Done to the Spine, with Remarks. In a Communication from Jonathan Dorr, Esq. ofCambridge (N. Y.), Dated May 23, 1803, A New and Spurious Drug, Bill of Mortality for Portsmouth (N. H.) for 1803, National Correction of Pestilence Engendered in Crowded Vessels, Dissertatio Medica Inauguralis: Sistens Observationes Ad Abscessum Bursalem Pertinentes, Apud Interrogationem Publicam, Prolocutas Et Sustentatas, Die Julii 11, A. D. 1801, Habitam: Quam, Annuente Summo Numine, Ex Auctoritate Reverendi Josephi Willard, S. T. D. LL. D. Universitatis Harvardianœ Præsidis, Et Honoratorum Et Reverendorum Curatorum Et Etiam Senatus Academici Consensu; Nec Non Institutionis Medicæ Decreto, Pro Gradu Doctoratus, Eruditorum Examini Subjicit Gulielmus Ingalls, Massachusettensis. 8vo. Pp. 17. Bostoniæ. Fleet. 1803, The Locust or Cicada of North-America, Memoir, by M. De Carendeffez, on Galvanic Electricity, the Electrats, Hydrurets, and Metallic Atmosphere Obtained from Volta's Pile, Which May Be Advantageously Substituted in Place of the Electrical Machine Generally Used, in Every Case Where Electricity Is Necessary. Translated and Communicated by James S. Stringham, M. D. Professor of Chemistry in Columbia College, Bite of a Rattle-Snake, Physical Investigations, and Deductions from Medical and Surgical Facts, &c. By William Barnwell, M. D. &c., A Pocket Conspectus of the London and Edinburgh Pharmacopæias: Wherein the Virtues, Uses, and Doses of the Several Articles and Preparations Contained in Those Works Are Concisely Stated; Their Pronunciation, as to Quantity, Is Distinctly Marked; and a Variety of Other Particulars Respecting Them Given: Calculated More Especially for the Use of Junior Practitioners. By Robert Graves, M. D. Member of the Royal College of Physicians, London; of the Royal Medical Society of Edinburgh; of the Medical Society of London, &c. &c. &c. From the Second London Edition, Corrected and Improved. 12mo. Pp. 132. Philadelphia. J. Humphreys. 1803, Appendix To the Citizens of the United States, Account of a Fire-Ball. Letter to the editor: Observations on the Contagiousness and Importation of Yellow Fever. By Thomas Dancer, M. D. of Kingston, in the Island of Jamaica. Addressed to the Editors of the Medical Repository. Review: Review Journal of Andrew Ellicott, Late Commissioner in Behalf of the United States, during Part of the Year ….
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