OUR THERAPEUTICS.*
IMPORTANCE OF RECOGNITION OF CERTAIN BLOOD-CHANGES, AND ESPECIALLY TOXEMIA, THEREIN.BY JOHN V. SHOEMAKER, M.D., LL.D.PHILADELPHIA.Mr. President and Members of the Ohio State Medical Society; Ladies and Gentlemen:—Among this large and distinguished audience assembled here this afternoon, I recognize many familiar faces, of friends, who, nearly two years ago assisted in the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the American Medical Association, in the city of Philadelphia. The pleasant impressions and agreeable recollections of that jubilee meeting will remain with most of us as long as life itself shall endure. Some grateful memory of that occasion, I think, must certainly have moved your president to invite me to address you to-day. This is an act of courtesy, which I correctly construe as a compliment to the medical profession of the "City of Brotherly Love," and also to the Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia, with both of which