PEPTOGENIC POWDER YIELDS AN ACCURATE AND ADEQUATE PHYSIOLOGICAL SUBSTITUTE FOR MOTHERS' MILK. A "humanised milk" which is in every partic ular a close approximation to the composition of average normal human milk; not only in its quantitative composition, but in its physical characteristics, physiological properties, density, taste and color, and in behavior with all reagents. It behaves with artificial gastric juice, with acids, and in the stomach, just as human milk does. It brings into play the normal digestive powers of the infant's stomach. It does not make milk unnaturally easy" of digestion, only renders it as digestible as mothers' milk. We believe that the Peptogenic Milk Powder yields a substitute for mothers' milk which is more accurate in every particular than is obtained by any other known method, recipe or process. Peptogenic Milk Powder is designed to supply the daily food for bottle-fed infants during the usual nursing period. It is not simply a food for sick infants, or for temporary use in cases of disordered digestion provoked by improper feeding. THE TWENTIETH SCHOOL YEAR WILL BEGIN ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1892, AND CONTINUE UNTIL JUNE 7, 1893. Eight months of instruction are given annually through a Graded COURSE OF FOUR YEARS. THE FACULTY. WILLIAM F. WARREN, LL.D., PRESIDENT. I. TISDALE TALBOT, M.D., 66 Marlborough Street, DEAN, Professor of Surgery. CONRAD WESSELHOEFT, M.D., 661 Boylston Street, Professor of Pathology and Thera peutics. HENRY C. AHLBORN, M.D., 258 Marlborough Street, Professor of Pathology and Pathologi cal Anatomy. J. HEBER SMITH, M.D., 279 Dartmouth Street, Professor of Materia Medica. WALTER WESSELHOEFT, M.D., Cambridge, Professor of Obstetrics. HENRY C. ANGELL, M.D., 16 Beacon Street, Professor of Ophthalmology. HERBERT C. CLAPP, M.D., 11 Columbus Square, Professor of Diseases of the Chest. DENTON G. WOODVINE, M.D., 739 Tremont Street, Professor of Diseases of the Throat. EDWARD P. COLBY, M.D., Cor. Berkeley and Boylston Streets, Professor of Nervous Diseases. ALONZO BOOTHBY, M.D., 1 Worcester Square, Associate Professor of Surgery and Surgical Diagnosis. JOHN L. COFFIN, M.D., Cor. Berkeley and Boylston Sts., Professor of Diseases of the Skin. In addition to the above, the following constitute the full faculty: GEORGE R. SOUTHWICK, M.D., 460 W. Chester Park, Associate Professor of Obstetrics. JOHN H. PAYNE, M.D., Pierce Building, Copley Square, Associate Professor of Ophthalmology. FRED B. PERCY, M.D., Brookline, Associate Professor of Materia Medica. JAMES B. BELL, M.D., 178 Commonwealth Avenue, Lecturer on Surgery. JOSEPH W. HAYWARD, M.D., Taunton, Lecturer on Fractures, Dislocations, and Gunshot WILLIAM L. JACKSON, M.D., 84 Dudley Street, Lecturer on Electro-Therapeutics. J. WILKINSON CLAPP, M.D., 10 Park Square, Lecturer on Pharmaceutics. NATHANIEL W. EMERSON, M.D., 118 Hancock St., Dorchester, Lecturer on Minor Surgery. FREDERICK W. HALSEY, M.D., 231 West Newton St., Lecturer on Diseases of the Rectum. WINTHROP T. TALBOT, M.D., 66 Marlborough St., Instructor in Pathological Anatomy. MAURICE W. TURNER, M.D., Brookline, Instructor in Pathology and Therapeutics. FREDERICK P. BATCHELDER, M.D., 285 West Chester Park, Instructor in Physiology, and Curator of the Museum. WALTER W. WHITE. M.D., 192 Dartmouth Street, Librarian. A. HOWARD POWERS, M.D., 756 Tremont Street, Demonstrator of Anatomy. Announcements, or information on special subjects connected with the School, may be obtained on application to the Dean, I. TISDALE TALBOT, M.D. 66 Marlborough Street, Boston, Mass. |