Hettingers Dental News, Bind 1–6Hettinger Bros., 1862 |
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27 North Seventh acid AMBLER TEES American Dental Association appearance arsenious acid Artificial Teeth beautiful Blowpipes Burs cheerfully recommend chloroform color Cortlandville creasote decay Dental Association Dental College dental profession DENTAL QUARTERLY DENTAL SCIENCE Dental Surgery dentine dentist Dentistry different manufacturers disease durability enamel ether extracted File filling Flasks Forceps give Gold Foil Gutta Percha heat inch incisor Iron JOHNSON & LUND lamp LATHE life-like Lund's Artificial Teeth Lund's Teeth manufactured by Johnson McQuillen Mechanical Dentistry metal natural nerve nitrous oxide North Seventh Street Operative Dentistry ounce packed pain patient Philadelphia Physiology plaster Plate platina pledget Plug polishing pound Powder practice Price Professor pulp qualities removed Rubber sale by JOHNSON shape silver Solder Steel Handles strength superior article Teeth manufactured Teeth of Johnson Teeth of Messrs tion tooth Trumansburg various Vulcanite Vulcanizing Oven Walnut Wheels York zinc
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Side 26 - ... neglect. Physicians should, therefore, minister to the sick with due impressions of the importance of their office; reflecting that the ease, the health, and the lives of those committed to their charge, depend on their skill, attention and fidelity. They should study, also, in their deportment, so to unite tenderness with firmness, and condescension with authority, as to inspire the minds of their patients with gratitude, respect and confidence.
Side 87 - And they sat down to eat bread : and they lifted up their eyes and looked, and, behold, a company of Ishmaelites came from Gilead with their camels bearing spicery and balm and myrrh, going to carry it down to Egypt.
Side 87 - And when they were come into the house, they saw the young child with Mary his mother, and fell down and worshipped him; and when they had opened their treasures, they presented unto him gifts, gold and frankincense and myrrh.
Side 159 - Let every tree in every garden own The Red-streak as supreme, whose pulpous fruit With gold irradiate, and vermilion shines, Tempting, not fatal, as the birth of that Primeval interdicted plant that won Fond Eve in hapless hour to taste, and die. This, of more bounteous influence, inspires Poetic raptures, and the lowly Muse Kindles to loftier strains ; even I perceive Her sacred virtue. See ! the numbers flow Easy, whilst, cheer'd with her nectareous juice, Hers, and my country's praises I exalt.
Side 26 - The obligation of secrecy extends beyond the period of professional services; none of the privacies of personal and domestic life, no infirmity of disposition, or flaw of character, observed during professional attendance, should ever be divulged by the physician, except when he is imperatively required to do so. The force and necessity of this obligation are indeed so great, that professional men have, under certain circumstances, been protected in their observance of secrecy by courts of justice.
Side 88 - And there came also Nicodemus, which at the first came to Jesus by night, and brought a mixture of myrrh and aloes, about an hundred pound weight.
Side 28 - ... parts of resin, and four parts of linseed oil, melted together in an iron pot. One part of native oxide of copper is then added, and one part of sulphuric acid is cautiously stirred in. The mixture is applied hot with a strong brush, and forms, when dry, a varnish as hard as stone. — London Chemical News. Preservative Action of Sulphate of Copper on Wood.
Side 26 - Secrecy and delicacy, when required by peculiar circumstances, should be strictly observed ; and the familiar and confidential intercourse to which physicians are admitted in their professional visits should be used with discretion, and with the most scrupulous regard to fidelity and honor.
Side 150 - ... grains of calcined magnesia, rubbed up with water in a mortar, stir till, after gelatinizing, the mixture again gets thin ; empty the mixture into a calico or muslin cloth, and press out the liquid ; remove the mass from the cloth into a clean mortar, and rub it up with a little water into a smooth cream ; in this state, it can destroy upwards of twenty grains of tartar emetic.