FOOTNOTES:[1]A Presidential Address before the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences.[2]Appeared first in the Journal of the American Medical Association, April 27, 1912.[3]A Presidential Address before the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences.[4]An Address before the Maine Medical Association, Portland, June 2nd, 1898.[5]An Address given before the Chas. K. Mills Society of Students of the University of Pennsylvania, February 19, 1902.[Reprinted from theUniv. of Penna. Medical Bulletin, March, 1902.][6]Address in Medicine, delivered June 24, 1902, at Yale University Commencement.[Reprinted from theYale Medical Journal, July, 1902.][7]Commencement Address at the Army Medical School, Washington, D. C., May 29, 1909.—From "The Military Surgeon," July, 1909.[8]I leave it to defenders of the Faith to reconcile this abhorrence with the persecutions of heretics and the tortures of the Inquisition permitted by the same Church.[9]Address delivered at the Annual Commencement of the Medical Department of the University of Chicago, (Rush Medical College), June 13, 1906.[10]Commemorative Address delivered at the Medical Department, University of Buffalo, October 16, 1896.
[1]A Presidential Address before the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences.
[1]A Presidential Address before the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences.
[2]Appeared first in the Journal of the American Medical Association, April 27, 1912.
[2]Appeared first in the Journal of the American Medical Association, April 27, 1912.
[3]A Presidential Address before the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences.
[3]A Presidential Address before the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences.
[4]An Address before the Maine Medical Association, Portland, June 2nd, 1898.
[4]An Address before the Maine Medical Association, Portland, June 2nd, 1898.
[5]An Address given before the Chas. K. Mills Society of Students of the University of Pennsylvania, February 19, 1902.[Reprinted from theUniv. of Penna. Medical Bulletin, March, 1902.]
[5]An Address given before the Chas. K. Mills Society of Students of the University of Pennsylvania, February 19, 1902.
[Reprinted from theUniv. of Penna. Medical Bulletin, March, 1902.]
[6]Address in Medicine, delivered June 24, 1902, at Yale University Commencement.[Reprinted from theYale Medical Journal, July, 1902.]
[6]Address in Medicine, delivered June 24, 1902, at Yale University Commencement.
[Reprinted from theYale Medical Journal, July, 1902.]
[7]Commencement Address at the Army Medical School, Washington, D. C., May 29, 1909.—From "The Military Surgeon," July, 1909.
[7]Commencement Address at the Army Medical School, Washington, D. C., May 29, 1909.—From "The Military Surgeon," July, 1909.
[8]I leave it to defenders of the Faith to reconcile this abhorrence with the persecutions of heretics and the tortures of the Inquisition permitted by the same Church.
[8]I leave it to defenders of the Faith to reconcile this abhorrence with the persecutions of heretics and the tortures of the Inquisition permitted by the same Church.
[9]Address delivered at the Annual Commencement of the Medical Department of the University of Chicago, (Rush Medical College), June 13, 1906.
[9]Address delivered at the Annual Commencement of the Medical Department of the University of Chicago, (Rush Medical College), June 13, 1906.
[10]Commemorative Address delivered at the Medical Department, University of Buffalo, October 16, 1896.
[10]Commemorative Address delivered at the Medical Department, University of Buffalo, October 16, 1896.
Transcriber's NotesObvious typographical errors have been silently corrected, but the variations in spelling, punctuation, accents and hyphenation remain as in the original.Chapter IX,Page 249The paragraph originally read: "This recognition of our profession was accorded much more unstintingly nearly two thousand years ago, at a time when it was much less deserved, when Cicero wrote (De Natura Deorum) "Homines ad inibus dando." (Men are never more godlike than when giving health to mankind)."The missing line in the Latin quotation has been restored.
Transcriber's Notes
Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected, but the variations in spelling, punctuation, accents and hyphenation remain as in the original.
Chapter IX,Page 249
The paragraph originally read: "This recognition of our profession was accorded much more unstintingly nearly two thousand years ago, at a time when it was much less deserved, when Cicero wrote (De Natura Deorum) "Homines ad inibus dando." (Men are never more godlike than when giving health to mankind)."
The missing line in the Latin quotation has been restored.