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Start Over You searched for: Collections Medicine in the Americas, 1610-1920 Remove constraint Collections: Medicine in the Americas, 1610-1920 Subjects Physiological Phenomena Remove constraint Subjects: Physiological Phenomena Languages English Remove constraint Languages: English

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209. Lessons in hygiene: an elementary text-book on the maintenance of health, with the rudiments of anatomy and physiology, and the treatment of emergent cases : comprising also lessons on the action of stimulants and sedatives on the brain and nervous system : adapted for common schools

210. Lessons in physiology

216. Madame Young's guide to health: her experience and practice for nearly forty years : a true family herbal, wherein is displayed the true properties and medical virtues of all the roots, herbs, &c, indigenous to the United States, and their combination in all the diseases the human body is heir to : also, an explanation of the human body, its liability to injuries through ignorance of its structure : dedicated excusively to her sex

217. The man wonderful in the house beautiful: an allegory teaching the principles of physiology and hygiene, and the effects of stimulants and narcotics : for home reading, also adapted as a reader for high schools and as a text-book for grammar, intermediate, and district schools

221. A manual of physiology

231. A new physical system of astronomy: an attempt to explain the operations of the powers which impel the planets and comets to perform eliptical revolutions round the sun, and revolve on their own axis : in which, the physical system of Sir Isaac Newton, is examined, and presumed to be refuted ; to which is annexed, a physiological treatise ; in which the first stage of animation is considered, and the means shewn, by which circulation is performed in the first rudiments of the incipient animal, before the vessels are completely organized, &c. ; together with an explanation of the general laws, by which the animal economy is governed ; and particularly, the mode whereby the operations of the vis medicatrix naturae, or the unassisted powers of nature, are exerted to obviate and cure disease ; also, successful methods of curing cancerous ulcers, the quartan ague, putrid fevers, stopping mortifications, and extracting frost, so as to leave the frozen member perfectly well

232. A new school physiology