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ARTICLE |

ADVANTAGE OF PRINTING ON ALTERNATE PAGES

Frank Thomas Woodbury, M.D.
JAMA. 1919;72(6):441-442. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610060055021.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:  —The busy physician nowadays resorts a great deal to the collection of data under specific heads for future reference, and for this reason is prone to take clippings from medical journals and file them under titles of subjects in matters wherein he is particularly interested. Only in those cases in which the physician has at his disposal paid clerical assistants for the purpose of this classification could he, in the present situation, have made a card index to articles in medical journals. Speaking from my personal experience, I find it much more satisfactory to cut out the article and file it in an envelop under the title of the subject. This being the case, it is somewhat troublesome in cutting out a valuable article to find on the opposite side of the page all or part of another equally valuable article on a different topic, which

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