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Prof. Virgil P. Gibney.
Murray B. Gordon, M.D.
Hermann Grad, M.D.
William Grosvenor, M.D.
Dr. Max. P. E. Groszmann.
Cosmo Hamilton.
Prof. Chas. W. Hargitt.
W. B. Haubridge, M.D.
Julius Sidney Heller, M.D.
B. Russell Herts.
William L. Holt, M.D.
Abraham Jacobi, M.D.
George Kennan.

JEROME WAGNER, M.D., Science and Research.

Ellice M. Alger, M.D.
George Gordon Battle.
Prof. Charles Austin Beard.
Edward L. Bernays, B.S.
Edward Bok.

William Brady, M.D.
Israel Bram, M.D.
Edward J. Brown, M.D.
Prof. Joseph D. Bryant.
John Burroughs.
Seymour Cunningham Chunn.
Hon. Hudson C. Clements.
Martin Cohen, M.D.
Prof. Solomon Solis Cohen.
E. H. Lewinski-Corwin, Ph.D.
William P. Cunningham, M.D.
Michael M. Davis, Jr., Ph.D.
Eugene V. Debs.

S. Adolphus Knopf, M.D.
Dr. Jacques Loeb.
Jack London.

William C. DeMille.
Bishop Wm. Croswell Doane.
J. Henry Dowd, M.D.
William Faversham.
Horace Fletcher.
Simon Flexner, M.D.

Wm. Palmer Lucus, M.D.
G. Frank Lydston, M.D.
J. Van Vliet Manning, M.D.
Edwin Markham.
Frederick J. Martin, Esq.
Col. L. M. Maus.
Hon. Herman A. Metz.
Miss Maude E. Miner.

Royale Hamilton Fowler, M.D. James John Monahan, M.D.

Lee K. Frankel, Ph.D.
T. Benedict Furniss.
Robert H. Gault, Ph.D.
Hon. W. J. Gaynor.
Prof. Arpad G. Gerster.

John B. Murphy, M.D.
M. J. Mustonen, M.D.
Mrs. Frederick Nathan.
Prof. Henry E. Ogden.
Prof. R. Burton Opitz.

Prof. Roswell Park.
Godfrey S. Pisek, M.D.
Wilhelm Plonies, M.D.
William Marion Reedy.
Beverley Robinson, M.D.
Victor Robinson.

William J. Robinson, M.D.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Lawrence T. Royster, M.D.
A. H. Sanford, M.D.
Theodore Wm. Schaefer, M.D.
William T. Shanahan, M.D.
Charles B. Slade, M.D.
W. S. Small, Ph.D.
C. Morton Smith, M.D.
J. P. Thornley, M.D.
William H. Tolman, M.D.
Geo. H. Torney, M.D.
George Sylvester Viereck.
Irving Wilson Voorhees, M.D.
Jerome Wagner, M.D.

J. T. Ainslie Walker, M.D.
James P. Warbasse, M.D.
Paul Warburg.

Prof. William H. Welch.
Brainerd H. Whitbeck, M.D.
William Charles White, M.D.
Ray Lyman Wilbur, M.D.
Ira S. Wile, M.D.

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VOL. 19

MEDICAL

Review of REVIEWS

JANUARY, 1913

A Happy New Year.

The first year of the reconstruction stimulate thought, encourage activity, has passed. We give cordial greetings and augment the love for medical scion the advent of the new year to our subscribers and wish them health and

ence.

happiness. In beginning the second year of our editorial work we wish to acknowledge with feelings of grateful ness and appreciation the many kind messages that have been sent to us. We wish to thank our contributors for their cordial coöperation and support.

We are making no promises for the future, but merely desire to express our hopes and aspiration. It is our aim to progress. The year to come we trust will bear witness to our earnest purpose. Our single desire is to develop a journal that looks upon the broadest horizon of medicine, that will

The Responsibility

The servant in the house was ailing -some fault of digestion, plainly and she called in a physician. He gave her morphine in repeated doses so that she was intoxicated for two days. The pain was relieved by the drug, and nature cured the disease. Such is the regular practice of many other thoughtless and unscientific physicians. Even a professor in a famous American Medical School ad

No. 1

We are looking forward and not backward, save to realize the errors of the past with a view to avoiding them in the future. We shall endeavor to

forsake the ruts of literary medicine and to seek out new highways for advancement.

The social aspects of medicine were never of greater importance than they are to-day. The connecting links between general practice and social welfare are not always clear, but it is our intent to make them more evident. We are dedicated to the newer fields of medicine, feeling that herein lies the greatest progress and the most valuable service.

for Drug Habits.

vised one of his students to take the
drug constantly for the relief of
frontal headache
frontal headache following study.
The physician became addicted to the
vice and later it finally resulted in ruin-
ing his practice and his life; he at last
conquered the habit but only by be-
coming a pitiful whisky-drunkard, un-
til he died. Another notable medical
professor became a morphinomaniac
and lost his Chair, practice, and soon

Copyright. 1913, by Frederic H. Robinson, Publisher. Published Monthly.

I

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