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Preserved without Boiling, and without the addition of any Substance to Prevent Fermentation.

During the past ten years this highly nutritious liquid food has been extensively used in all forms of acute disease. PURE GRAPE JUICE is both food and drink, which patients often relish when they refuse all other food. It is especially recommended in Typhoid Fever, Pneumonia, Pleuritis, Peritonitis, Rheumatism, and for lyingin patients. In Cancer of the Stomach PURE GRAPE JUICE will be retained often when no other food can be, thus protracting life and rendering the patient comfortable for weeks. It is also recommended in all forms of It is eschronic disease, except in Diabetes Mellitus.

pecially recommended in Aphasia, Pernicious Anæmia and the milder forms of this disease.

Preserved by E. R. TULLER, M. D., Vineland, NJ.

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I have used your Effervescent Seltzer Aperient for years, and can cheerfully recommend it as an agreeable, efficient and reliable aperient, producing no griping or nausea, and particularly efficacious to overcome constipation in pregnant women. And it is also a most excellent vehicle to administer Tinct. Ferri Chlor., as it effectually counteracts the constipating tendency of that most valuable ferruginous preparation.

SELTZER

FRANK RIESER, M. D.

NEW YORK, May 19, 1891.

Allow me to express my appreciation of the use of your Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient. I have for a long time used it in my practice, with good results.

Recently have had several patients use the Aperient in small doses combined with milk, when needed to overcome biliousness. The results have been good.

J. N. BISHOP, M. D.

* APERIENT *

BUFFALO, N. Y., April 8, 1889.

I have for a long time made use of Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient because of a tendency to the gouty and rheumatic diathesis, which I find this alkali is quite suited to in my case. I can speak from personal experience of the value of the Aperi ent, taken in teaspoonful doses on rising and retiring; and I have found in its use in this manner relief from the lithemic aches that I formerly suffered with.

WM. WARREN POTTER, M. D.

PREPARED FOR NEW YORK PHYSICIANS IN 1844. TARRANT & CO., Manufacturing Chemists, NEW YORK.

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ESTABLISHED 1834.

PHYSICIAN'S VISITING LIST

AND

Prescription Record.

The publishers would respectfully call the attention of physicians to the new edition of their VISITING LIST AND PRESCRIPTION RECORD, which they offer as possessing many features especially desirable in a Pocket Record.

While it gives every opportunity to keep a full record of Visits, Prescriptions, and Charges, its size is smaller and more compact than any other list offered to the Homœopathic profession.

It includes such tables and information for ready reference as to render the List of value, and not make it cumbersome.

The paper, typography, and binding are each superior in quality, being bound in flexible tuck binding and gilt edges, with pocket and pencil, presenting a Record both rich and elegant in appearance.

The List is made "Perpetual," and of two sizes; viz., for THIRTY and for SIXTY patients a week.

PRESS NOTICES.

"This is certainly one of the most beautiful, portable, and convenient of all the visiting lists we have seen."-Homeopathic World.

"Now is the time to provide yourselves with a new Visiting List for the ensuing year; and amongst all, we find Otis Clapp & Son's to be really most convenient. It is the right shape for the pocket, not too bulky, and contains all the usual desirable information of visiting-list character. Send for it at once, so as to have it ready when needed."- California Homeopath.

"It is a perfect book of its kind."- Southern Journal of Homeopathy.

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Sample pages of Record of Daily Engagements and Prescriptions sent to any address on application to the publishers.

OTIS CLAPP & SON,

BOSTON AND PROVIDENCE.

BOSTON,

Is the only Raw Food preparation known and so recognized by the National Societies of Europe and the United States.

WE EXTRACT FROM ESSAYS READ BEFORE THEM:

Extract from Essay read at Richmond, Va., before the American Medical Association, by George R. Shepherd, M.D., of Hartford, Conn., on the value of Murdock's Liquid Food. In presenting these cases, gentlemen, I have no pet theory to advocate, nor any hobby to ride. They are simple facts from my personal experience, in relation to the use of certain food extracts that I believe are not as well known to the profession as they should be, and in offering them to you it is with a simple desire to add a little to the general fund of practical experience, and with the hope that some of you, at least, may find these foods of as much service in your daily practice as I have in mine.

THE MURDOCK LIQUID FOOD Co.:

Gents. In answer to your inquiry as to what form of Raw Food I used in obtaining the results reported in my paper read before the American Medical Association at Washington, D. C., I reply that I used several forms, but the one I relied upon was your Liquid Food.

I am sure that a judicious use of your Food will be the means of saving many valuable lives, and that no ethical sensitiveness as to the names of persons producing valuable combinations should deter me from stating the name of the preparations from which these results have been obtained.

Respectfully yours,

B. N. TOWLE, M.D., Boston.

Dr. Towle nor Shepherd never read any essay before any society except on Murdock's Liquid Food, and they are published by counterfeit manufacturers, as having been read on their preparations, as they could not be copyrighted.

The Important Relation which Proper Alimentation Bears to the Results of Surgical Procedures. Read before the British Medical Association, at Brighton, England, by WILLIAM C. WILE, M.D., of Newtown, Conn., U. S. A., Vice-President of the American Medical Association, Member of the Committee of Arrangements of the Ninth International Medical Congress, Editor of the New England Medical Monthly, etc., etc.

Permit me in closing to recall the more important conclusions arrived at in this paper:

First. The processes of repair in a wound can only go on satisfactorily when the part receives an abundant supply of blood of good quality.

Second. Both the plasma and the corpuscles of the blood are essential to the progress of the reparative processes, and both are largely composed of the various albuminous substances, which require to be frequently renewed.

Third. In order to maintain the quality of the blood at such a standard as will best promote repair, it is necessary that an adequate supply of nutritious and easily-digested food should be taken and assimilated.

Fourth. The most useful foods are milk, uncooked, and, if necessary, more or less completely peptonized; eggs slightly cooked; and beef and mutton, roasted or broiled, partially digested, or suitably prepared, and administered in a raw state.

Discussion followed the reading by Dr. Milner Fothergill, of London: Prof. Oscar Leibrich, of Berin; Prof. Pancoast, of Philadelphia; Dr. Alfred S. Guhb, of London; Dr. Pearson, of Baltimore, and others. To any party wishing a copy of the discussion and cases noted in the essay, we will forward a copy of the essay complete.

Extract from an Essay read at Saratoga, before the American Institute of Homœopathy, Section of Surgery, by Dr. Horace Packard, of Boston.

In connection I wish to speak of the dietetic treatment. It is the experience of all that the digestive organs suffer in common with other parts of the body in this lesion, and, after the operation, the recovery is not infrequently seriously retarded and many lives lost by inability to supply the patient with nutriment which can be easily assimilated. In this direction nothing has given me such satisfactory results as Murdock's Liquid Food given before as well as after the operation, to all the cases; and I believe that the rapid recovery recorded so frequently in the table was materially hastened by the use of this valuable preparation, as I have neve seen a case that could not retain it, even if retained only by injections, when all things else were refused. It seemed to benefit those to whom it was administered, not only

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