| Sir John Forbes, Alexander Tweedie, John Conolly - 1832 - 858 pages
...favourable report induces his contemporaries to pursue the same means of cure, the same favourable result is obtained, and it appears impossible for...place is supplied by some new remedy, which, like its predecessors, runs through the same career of expectation, success, and disappointment. Let us apply... | |
| John Bostock - 1835 - 284 pages
...favourable report induces his contemporaries to pursue the same means of cure, the same favourable result is obtained, and it appears impossible for...place is supplied by some new remedy, which, like its predecessors, runs through the same career of expectation, success, and disappointment. Let us apply... | |
| I. G. Rosenstein - 1840 - 312 pages
...ability of the narrator : his favorable report induces his contemporaries to pursue the same moans of cure,- — the same favorable result is obtained;...few short years, the boasted .remedy has lost its value : the disease no longer yields to its power, whilo its place is supplied by some new remedy,... | |
| Sir John Forbes, Alexander Tweedie, John Conolly - 1845 - 788 pages
...favourable report induces his contemporaries to pursue the same means of cure, the same favourable result is obtained, and it appears impossible for any fact to be supported by mote decisive testimony. Yet in the space of a few short years the boasted remedy has lost its virtue,... | |
| I. G. Rosenstein - 1846 - 304 pages
...of proposing a new mode of practice without supporting it by the results of practical experience ; yet in the space of a few short years the boasted...place is supplied by some new remedy, which, like its predecessors, runs through the same career of expectation, success, and disappointment. Let us apply... | |
| Russell Thacher Trall - 1851 - 488 pages
...pursue the same means of cure ; the same favorable result is obtained, and it appears impossible for an* fact to be supported by more decisive testimony. Yet...career of expectation, success, and disappointment." HISTORY O¥ BATHING. A complete record of the bathing customs of all nations, and of the remedial uses... | |
| John Mason Good - 1864 - 766 pages
...favourable report induces his contemporaries to pursue the same means of cure, the same favourable result is obtained, and it appears impossible for...the space of a few short years the boasted remedy lias lost its virtue, the disease no longer yields to its power, while its place is supplied by some... | |
| 1884 - 400 pages
...the narrator; his favorable report induces his contemporaries to pursue the same means of cure, tin? same favorable result is obtained, and it appears...fact to be supported by more decisive testimony. Yet m the space of a few short years the boasted remedy has lost its virtue, the disease no longer yields... | |
| Eugene Hatch - 1891 - 198 pages
...supporting it with the results of practical experience. The disease exists, the remedy is prescribed, and it is removed; we have no reason to doubt the veracity...career of expectation, success and disappointment." Rev. Dr. JM Buckley, in an article in the Century Magazine strongly opposing " Christian Science and... | |
| Herbert M. Shelton - 1996 - 580 pages
...Indians saved the sun when it was eclipsed? Trall quotes the medical historian, Bostock, as saying: "In modern times and more remarkably in Great Britain,...career of expectation, success, and disappointment." A few months ago the British Medical Journal declared: "Remedies and modes of treatment, like systems... | |
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