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April 1, 1867.

EXTRACTS FROM THE MEDICAL PRESS.

St. Louis Medical Reporter, St. Louis, Mo. "We have, personally, used Mr. FOUGERA'S COMPOUND IODINISED COD LIVER OIL, and can, from experience, pronounce it one of the best articles of the kind now in use, and trust it will receive that attention from the profession which it so deservedly merits. His other preparations stand high, both for excellence and purity."

April, 1867.

J. S. B. ALLEYNE, M. D., C. F. POTTER, M. D., Editors.

Detroit Review of Med. & Phar., Detroit, Mich. "We can speak most sincerely in approval of the elegant appearance and purity of Mr. FOUGERA'S COMPOUND IODINISED COD LIVER OIL. Its increased medicinal power will commend it to all who are in need of such a remedy. Mr. FOUGERA's well-known reputation is a sufficient guarantee for the genineness of any preparation bearing his name."

DRS. G. P. ANDREWS, E. W. JENKS, THEO. A. McGraw, Editors.

Leavenworth Medical Herald, Kansas.

"We have used Mr. E. FOUGERA's preparations for several years, and can recommend them as thoroughly reliable in every particular. The COMPOUND IODINISED COD LIVER OIL, as made by Mr. E. FOUGERA, is one of the best preparations now in use. We trust our readers will give it a trial, for we feel convinced it will more than meet their expectations."

C. A. LOGAN, M. D., T. SINKS, M. D., Editors.

Medical Gazette, of New York City.

March 21, 1868. "The advantages claimed for Mr. E. FOUGERA'S COD LIVER OIL are that by reason of the addition of Iodine, Bromine and Phosphorus, it is more efficacious, and at the same time the stomach need not be disordered by an excessive amount of oil administered. This oil was given to about eighty patients, in the out-door department of Bellevue Hospital, about thirty of whom were children, the remainder belonging chiefly to the department of chest diseases. The opinion of the physicians using it is nearly unanimous to this effect that the Oil is of a decided medicinal value; that compared with ordinary Cod Liver Oil, it appears to take effect more rapidly; and that it obviates the very common necessity of adding extemporaneously to the Oil, medicines containing iodine or iron, particularly the syrup of iodide of iron." L. M. YALE, M. D., Editor.

May 2, 1868.

Medical and Surgical Reporter, Phila., Pa. Commenting on the above statement of the New York Medical Gazette,

says:

"The above testimony is corroborated from various sources, from all parts of the country. In the East, South and far West, it is fast gaining a strong hold among the members of the profession, who have given it a thorough

and impartial trial; and the good effects obtained from it have been commented upon by medical journals in all parts of the United States. It is over eight years since it was first introduced to the medical profession in New York and Brooklyn, and since then it has gradually and steadily increased in favor with the profession, and may now be regarded as among the standard preparations of the day."

S. W. BUTLER, M. D., D. G. BRINTON, M. D., Editors.

July, 1868.

Cincinnati Lancet and Observer, Cinn., Ohio. "We have used FOUGERA'S COD LIVER OIL in the Dispensary of the Miami Medical College, and in private practice, with great satisfaction. The addition which Mr. FOUGERA makes of Iodine, Bromine, &c., evidently increases the efficacy of the original oil." E. B. STEPHENS, M. D., Editor.

August, 1868. Richmond and Louisville Med. Journal, Louisville, Ky. "FOUGERA'S COD LIVER OIL.-The following statement is published, not as a careless and idle eulogy, but as the result of observation and testimony. "Both in this State and in Virginia, private practitioners have been questioned in regard to their experience with this preparation, and the testimony has, without exception, been extremely favorable. The general belief is, that the oil is equal to any that is made, and that the blending, pharmaceutically, iodine, bromide and phosphorus with it, produces more satisfactory results, than where good oil and some preparation of iodine are given separately. The out-door department of Bellevue Hospital has, under unfavorable circumstances, experimented largely with this preparation, and with excellent effects. The editor of the Cincinnati Lancet and Observer states, that he has "used this oil in the Dispensary of Miami Medical College, and in private practice, with great satisfaction. The addition of iodine, bromine, &c., evidently increases the efficiency of the original oil."

"All the testimony received has been equally satisfactory, and it is believed that this oil can, with safety and justice, be recommended to the profession." E. S. GAILLARD, M. D., Editor.

November, 1868.

The Detroit Review of Medicine, Mich.

In quoting the above notice from the Richmond and Louisville Medical Journal, adds: "The physicians of this city concur very decidedly with the above in their opinion of Fougera's Cod Liver Oil."

DRS. G. P. ANDREWS, E. M. JENKS, THEO. A. McGRAW, Editors.

November, 1868.

Canada Medical Journal, Montreal. "Having made use of FOUGERA'S COD LIVER OIL in several cases, it has impressed us as being of really good therapeutical value, being much more speedy in its action than ordinary cod liver oil. It seems applicable to all cases where Cod Liver Oil is demanded; but, in our experience, it is of especial benefit in cases of spinal disease and rickets. We notice that many of our exchanges speak favorably of this oil, and state that its employment is rapidly spreading throughout the United States. M. E. MUIR, Montreal, is the agent for the Dominion of Canada, and can supply any quantity."

G. E. FENWICK, M. D., F. W. CAMPBELL, M. D., Editors.

TRANSACTIONS

OF THE

MEDICAL SOCIETY

OF

NEW JERSEY.

1870.

NEWARK, N. J.:

JENNINGS BROTHERS, STEAM Printers, 153 and 155 MarkET STREET.

1870.

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