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ORIGINAL ARTICLES.

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Abscess of Mesentery with Gangrene of Small Intestine, 326.
Abdominal Pain. 359.

About Discord Still Existing in Some Counties, 291.
Acidosis, Its Determination, Significance and Treatment, 650.
Acute Bright's Disease, 594.

Acute Articular Rheumatism in Children, 275.
Acute Septic Peritonitis, 279.

Acute Suppurative Cholecystitis Complicated by Typhoid
Fever, 45.

Active and Passive Immunization, The Essential Difference Between Vaccino and Serum Therapy, 324.

Address, President's to Carlisle County Medical Society, 222 Address of President of Fendleton County Medical Society,

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Bases of Symptoms, 555.

Bone Graft Surgery, 234.

Clinics of John B. Murphy, 555, 167, 168.

Colon Hygiene, 233.

Diseases of the Eye, 600.

Diseases of the Nose and Throat, 56.

Diseases of the Kidney and Urinary Bladder, 168.

Endemic Diseases of Southern States, 289

General Medicine, Practical Medical Series, 234.
Gynecology, 56, 400.

Infant Feeding and Allied Topics, 354.
International Clinic, 56, 233, 555.

Kinetic Drive, Its Phenomena and Control, 44.
Materia Medica and Prescription Writing, 56.
Mayo Clinic, Papers Collected 1915, 600.

Medical Clinic of Chicago, 56, 233, 290, 555, 662.
Medical and Veterinary Entomology, 234.
Nervous and Mental Diseases, 234.

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Care and Comfort of the Surgical Patient, 249.

Case of Bacillus Aerogenes Capsulatus Infection with Recovery, 335.

Carcinomata of the Breast with Metastasis of the Liver, 365. Carbuncle, Treatment of, 342.

Cases of Insanity Selected from a Long and Busy Practice, 486.

Catarrh, Gastro-Intestinal, 549.

Camp Sanitation, 595

Cholecystitis, Acute Suppurative, Complicated by Typhoid Fever, 45.

Christian County and Hopkinsville, 511.

Chronic Prostatitis, 150.

Chronic Hypertension, 194.

Commercial Exhibit, 449, 525.

Complications and Sequela of Influenza, 310.

Colds, Their Significance and Treatment, 220.
Colles' Fracture, 91.

Conference of City and County Health Officers, 1.

Concerning Dental Mal-Occlusion, 382.

Condition for Which Hippocrates Bled, 276.

Contagion and How To Combat It, 342.

Constitution and By-Laws, 456.

County Obstetrics, 336.

County Officers, 605.

County Members Falling Down, 40

Courteous Physician, 303.

Crime as a Disease, 488.

Definite Death Certificate, 58.

D

Dermatology and Syphilis at the Detroit Session, 406. Detail Men, 605.

Dextri Maltose, 170.

Diagnosis and Medical Treatment of Gastric and Duodenal Ulcers, 27.

Diagnostic Significance of Pain in the Chest, 191.

Diarrhea, Summer, 584.

Difficult Presentations, 135.

Digitalis, Its Indications and Use. 60.

Differential Diagnosis Between Chronic Cholecystitis, Duo

denal Ulcer and Simulating Neuroses, 429.

Diphtheria, Modern Treatment of, 412.

Diphtheria, After Effects on the Eye Ear, Nose and Throat, 407.

Discussions, 448.

Doctor Considered as a Business Man, 533

Dope Dispensing Doctors. 2, 172.

Do You Want Anything, 58.

Dr. Stuart Exonerated, 402.

Dr. Taneyhill, 176.
Duodenal Ulcer,587.

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Early Symptoms of Tuberculosis, 215.
Eclampsia of Pregnancy, 547.
Eclampsia, Puerperal, 82.

Eczema, Relationship of Feeding in Infantile, 576
EDITORIALS:

About the Discord Still Existing in Some County
Societies, 291

An Innovation, 607.

Annual A. M. A. Meeting, 294.

Annual Meeting, 447.

Annoying Laboratory Experiences, 401.

Army Rejections, 451.

At Hopkinsville, 557.

All-Time Health Officers Bill, 57.

Appreciation of Mr. Kohn, 105.

Bill to Prevent Buying and Selling of Patients by Physicians, 57.

Birth Registrations, 173. Breeding Flies, 607.

Cardui Trial, 356, 449.

Carrel Solution, 606.

Conference of City and County Health Officers, 1

Commercial Exhibit, 449.

County Members Falling Down, 401.

County Officers, 605.

Dope Dispensing Doctors, 2, 172.

Definite Death Certificates, 58.

Detail Men, 605.

Dextri Maltose, 170.

Doctor R. N. Simmons, 295.

Doctor Churchill, 170

Doctor W. L. Rodman, 171.
Doctor Ap. Morgan Vance, 171.
Doctor Vernon Robbins, 510.
Dector Von Ezdorf, 510.

Doctor John B Murphy, 558.

Doctor J. H. Lackey, 450.
Doctor U. L. Taylor, 4.

Doctor Charles H. Todd, 606.
Discussions, 448

Do You Want Anything, 58.
Exterminate the Rat, 2.
Forty Years Ago, 509.
Hopkinsville Meeting, 401.
Index, 605.

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Malpractice Suits After One Year, 239.
Manual for Hea'th Officers, 402.
Management of Normal Labor, 374.
Management of the Newly Born, 199
May We Count On Your Assistance, 6.
Medical Inspection of Schools, 263.

Medical Inspection of School Children, 320.
Medical Treatment of Glaucoma, 416.

Medico-Legal Committee, Eighth Annual Report of, 526.
Medico-Legal Committee, Lessons and Observations of, 527.
Medical Dictionary, 6.

Medical Authorities and Viburnum Prunifolium, 294.
MEMORIAM, IN:

John G. Brooks, 103, 397.

Joshua T. Wesley, 556.

J. E. Johnson, 397.

Scholes, C. E, 397.

Yelton, W. H., 290.

Metastatic Infection of Bone, 480.

Minutes of Proceedings of Twenty-fifth

Annual

Session,

Held at Hopkinsville, April 1876, 513. Minutes of the Sixty-sixth Annual Meeting, 609. Modern Treatment of Diphtheria, 412

Monstrosities and Congenital Deformities, 184. Murphy, J. B., 558.

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Obstetric Forceps, Some of the Uses of, 363.
Official Call, 454

OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Bill to Prevent Division of Fees, 59.
Constitution and By-Laws, 456.

Christian County and Hopkinsville, 511.
Commercial Exhibit, 525.

Eighth Annual Report, Medico-Legal Committee, 526.
Minutes of the Twenty-fifth Annual Session Held in
Hopkinsville, April, 1876, 513

Kentucky State Medical Association-Official Minutes
of the Sixty-sixth Annual Meeting, 609

Official Minutes of the House of Delegates of the Sixty-sixth Annual Meeting, 616.

New Model Advertising Law, 239.

New Pure Food Law, 239.

No Malpractice Suits After One Year, 239.

Program, 297, 453, 510.

REPORT OF:

Auditor, 465.

Council, 462

Business Manager, 477.

Secretary, 474.

Severe Penalty for Fee Splitting, 239

Vital Statistics Report for 1915, 178.

Ophthalmia Neonatorum and Trachoma, 418. Operations of Choice, 417.

Operation and

Treatment of Rectal Lesions, 33

Optometry Bill, 57.

Index, 664.

Influenza, Complications and Sequela, 310. Infantile Paralysis, 403

Oration in Medicine, 560.

Inguinal Hernia, 590.

Innovation, 607.

Injury to Intestine Followed by Volvulus, 225.

Intravenous Use of Radium in High Blood Pressure, 384.

Intensive treatment of Syphilis, 63.

Intussusception In Infants, 110.

Intussusception in Adults; Report of Case, 492.
Invocation, 609.

Iodine, Use of, and the Iodides in Medicine, 186.

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Jaw, Surgical Infections of, 425

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Kentucky's Advanced Legislation, 355.
Kidney, Commoner Diseases of, 259.

Kidney, Some Tuberculous Infections of, 568.

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Business Manager, 477.

Medico-Legal Committee, 526.
Secretary, 474.

Report of Councilor of First District, 620.
Report of Councilor of Sixth District, 621.
Report of Councilor of Seventh District, 621.
Report of Councilor of Eighth District, 622
Report of Councilor of Ninth District, 641.
Report of Councilor of Tenth District, 623.
Report of Councilor of Eleventh District, 624.
Report of Delegates by Counties, 624-630.

Report of Committee on Medical Preparedness, 635.
Report of Committee on Legislation and Public Policy,
640.

Report of Committee on Public Health, 644.

Report of Committee on Medical Ethics, 645.
Report of Committec on Tuberculosis, 645.

Report of Louisville Vice Commission, 493.

Report of Carcinomata of the Breast with Metastases to the Liver, 365.

Resection of Stomach for Calloused Saddle Ulcer of the Lesser Curvature, 365.

Resignation of Prof R. M. Allen, 236

Response to Address of Welcome, 611.

Review of Conditions Resulting from Cardio-Vascular Disturbances With or Without Organic Changes of the Heart and Vessels, 71.

Rheumatism Acute Articular, 275.

Rhinitis, Acute, 273.

Roentgenology, 193.

Roads, Their Diseases and Treatment, 224.

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Septic Peritonitis, 279.

Send for Containers, 173.

Severe Penalty for Fee Splitting, 239.

Skull and Brain Injuries from Surgical Poin of View, 210.
Some Observations with Local Anesthesia, 306.

Some of the Uses and Abuses of Obstetric Forceps, 363.
Some Cardio-Vascular Stimulants and Their Uses, 366.
Spider Bites, 559.

Splenomegaly of Inherited Syphilis, 583.

Study of the Secretions of the Mammal, A Factor in the Cause of Eclampsia, 7.

Surgery of the Infected Hand, 24.

Surgery in the Country, 195.

Surgery in the Mountains of Kentucky, 301.

Surgical Infection of the Jaw, 425.

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Tuberculosis, Early Symptoms of, 215.
Tuberculosis, Modern Medical and Surgical Treatment of,

242.

Tumors, Breast, 311. Twilight Sleep, 499.

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Ulcers, Gastric and Duodenal, 31.

Ulcers, Gastric and Duodenal, Perforation of, 180.

Ulcers, Gastric and Duodenal, Present Status of, Diagnosis and Surgical Treatment, 315.

Ulcer, Duodenal, 587

United We Stand, Divided We Fall, 58.

Urinalysis In Life Insurance, 266.

Uremia, 359.

Use of Iodine and Iodides in Medicine, 186.

Use of Pituitrin in Medical and Surgical Practice, 198. Usefulness of the X ray and High Frequency Current in the Treatment of Skin Lesions, Especially with Reference to Cancer, with Report of Cases, 88.

Vaccines and Serums, 208.

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Verumontanum with Reference to Referred Symptoms, 143.
Vital Statistics for 1915, 169, 178.

Volvulus, Injury to Intestine Followed by, 225.
Von Ezdorf, Dr. 510.

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Harrison, 100, 230. 390, 391.

Henderson, 99, 100.

Hopkins, 100.

Jefferson, 101, 162.

Laurel, 101.

Lewis, 230.

Lyon, 289, 350, 391.

Mason, 102.

McCreary, 101

Mercer, 164.

Muhlenburg, 164.

Muldraugh Hill, 166.
Nelson, 289.

Pendleton, 231, 232, 442.
Pike, 102.

Pulaski, 230, 231, 232.
Rockcastle, 102.

Rowan, 350.

Russell, 507, 558.
Shelby, 232
Todd, 102.

Warren, 508, 659.
Washington, 166.
Whitley, 103.
Wolfe, 103

Tubercle Bacilli in Heart Clots in Miliary Tuberculosis. A case of primary tuberculosis of the cervical lymph nodes and a widely disseminated miliary tuberculosis (skin, endocardium) was examined by Dieterle. The case was one of chronic lymphatic myelogenous leukemia with secondary tuberculosis. Four tubercle bacilli to sixty slides, or 1 to 15, were found in the venous blood of the right heart.

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A full New Year of golden opportunities is before us. With the tolling of the bells which ushers it in, we naturally start with renewed resolutions in the battle of life.

First, let us be better diagnosticians. Let's not be negligent or slothful in our work. Let's carefully examine each patient, and in so far as it is possible, let's decide what is the matter and then fit our remedial agents to the actual condition which confronts us. Let's cut out the proprietaries. Patent medicines are not a bit worse. It is an insult to a patient's intelligence to prescribe a remedy of whose composition and indications you have only the manufacturer's word. Use fewer drugs and use them more wisely.

Let us attend every meeting of our county society. Even the few who are so well qualified as to think they do not need it will find that they can gain much by sharing their knowledge with the less fortunate, and most of us, realizing that we do need to touch elbows with our fellow, will gladly attend these meetings because we know the good they do us. Instead of asking our county secretary to spend his good time, for which he receives no compensation, in hunting us up, let's mail him a check for our dues to-day. Then when one of us is on the program, let's be prepared and be prompt. It is not fair to ask our brother practitioners to come to a meeting to hear us carelessly discuss a subject about which we have not refreshed our minds and memory. It is easy to say that case reports are the best and most interesting, but it is well to remember that only those case reports are interesting to others in which we ourselves are properly prepared.

Let's us resolve to read the JOURNAL more carefully and discriminately; especially, let us resolve to support the advertisers who support it. Let us remember, for instance, that Saunders publishes the best books on practic

No. 1

ally every medical subject and let us, therefore, patronize Saunders when we need text. books. Without financial support of our advertisers, naturally, they cannot continue their support of us. Let us beyond and above all things be better and cleaner men, broader, more patriotic citizens, better qualified and better practicing physicians.

THE CONFERENCE OF COUNTY AND CITY HEALTH OFFICERS.

Under the auspices of the State Board of Health, the Annual School or Conference of County and City Health Officers was held in Louisville, December 8, 9 and 10. In many ways, this was the most successful conference which has been held. Every contribution to the program pointed out. more clearly the necessity for a whole time health officer in every county which can afford it, to devote his entire time to carrying to all the people the modern intensive methods for the prevention of disease. The discussion of malaria by Dr. W. S. Leathers, of the Mississippi State Board of Health, was so complete as to leave nothing to be added to it. Dr. Curry, our own State Sanitary Engineer, described the technical building of the Kentucky Sanitary Privy so perfectly and practically that everyone present felt that he knew exactly how to do the job. An interesting announcement was made by the State Board of Health that no physician would be considered as eligible for appointment on a local board of health unless he has a Kentucky Sanitary Privy at his home and office, unless he is located on a sanitary sewerage system.

Dr. South, our State Bacteriologist, made a most interesting illustrated talk on the use and abuse of the State Laboratory. She said. that its chief abuse was the failure of any doctor in the State to use it whenever he needed laboratory assistance. She emphasized the importance of sending specimens into the laboratory in the special containers required by the federal law, which are furnished free by

the Board to any physician that asks for them. The attendance at this meeting was larger than ever before. Every county health officer was present except a few detained by epidemics of diphtheria. All the city health of ficers except a few from third class cities were present.

THE DOPE DISPENSING DOCTOR.

During the recent Conference of County and City Health Officers in Louisville, a special meeting of the State Board of Health directed that every physician in the State be notified that any physician convicted in court of illegal traffic in narcotics will have his license to practice medicine revoked upon presentation of proof. This is a matter of great importance to the profession and to the people of Kentucky. Mr. Bloomfield, the very ef fective attorney of the State Board of Pharmacists, has well said that the traffic in narcotics has been transferred from the crooked druggist to the crooked doctor. The State Board of Health proposes to see that the crooked doctor is no longer permitted to practice this nefarious branch of the profession.

The Courier-Journal contains the following editorial in regard to the dope dispensing doctor, which will be read with interest and appreciation by every honest physician:

"Decision of the State Board of Health to bar from practice any physician in the State. convicted in courts of illegal traffic in opiates deserves commendation. The phrase 'crooks in all trades,' applies to the medical profession as well as to any other and honest physicians welcome the State Board's announce

ment as much as does the public. Nothing but gain can accrue from the loss of physicians whose conscience can be quieted by an American eagle, stamped on coinage of the

realm.

"The hoard's decision comes in good time. Enforcement of the Harrison narcotic law has put a check on the operations of crooked druggists who formerly reaped a golden harvest through sale of 'dope' to unfortunates addicted to the habit. Illegal traffic along wholesale lines no longer can be practiced by them without discovery by Federal authorities. The crooked druggist has stepped down and out and into his shoes has stepped the crooked physician.

"Persons addicted to the use of morphine, cocaine and other opiates make a beaten path to his door. For a specified fee, which varies according to the greed of the physician and the purse of the 'fiend' he will write for his patient a prescription for the drug. So wholesale became the operations of some physicians along this line that the Board of Health de

cided it was high time to take action in the matter.

"At a meeting last week the board adopted resolutions providing that any physician canvicted in court of selling or furnishing morphine, cocaine or other opiates to habitues in violation of the law shall have his right to practice medicine withdrawn. The board is given this power by a State statute. The secretary of the body is notifying every physici

an in the State of the board's action.

"Three physicians in the State, arrested recently for illegal traffic in opiates, have pleaded guilty, evidently expecting to be released after paying a small fine. The action of the board will make the crooked physician in the future think twice before he violates the law."

MALARIA.

It is of the utmost importance that we reconstruct our ideas of the management of many diseases in line with the results of modern investigation. For example let us consider malaria. In the first place there is a great deal more of this distinctly parasitic disease in Kentucky than we have thought. During the past wet summer it has increased ten fold over the previous year. It is a disease frequently unrecognized and more frequently diagnosed when it does not exist. In clear cases of chills and fever it is at times

justifiable to administer quinine on a clinical mistakes could be avoided by making as a diagnosis. But even in evident cases many routine a blood smear on a glass slide, stainexamining it with a microscope for the plas ing it according to well-known methods and modium malariae before any quinine is given. If too busy or unaccustomed to such

work, send such smear to the State Bacteriologist or other Laboratory and get an accurate diagnosis. Then administer treatment if malaria is present. Give ten grains of quinine every hour until three doses are taken each morning for four days. Afterwards give three ten grain doses of quinine every fourth day for six weeks. This will cure malaria in

every acute case.

EXTERMINATE THE RATS.

Desha Breckinridge writes many good editorials in the Lexington Herald but the following is one of the best and is cordially commended to every useful citizen of Kentucky:

"The Herald is often pressed to give free advertising to various enterprises and commodities of different sorts. As a rule it refuses to give any such advertising except at regular advertising rates. In violation of that

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