ISS. | 166 
- of experience with the former, which I much pre- 
fer, on many accounts, to the common issue. On 
the whole I recommend them to your notice, as 
valuable, and, rather too much neglected, curative 
agents in general practice. Like the miscellane- 
ous employment of epispastics, the varied affections, 
which indicate their, propriety to the reflecting 
physician, must be the result of experience and 
it in the course of his practice, rather than 
he result of any definite rules for their establish- 
ment, suggested from the lecturer’s desk. 
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