198 Influence of Chlorine. 
ulcers, which had been unsuccessfully treated by the common 
eth He has also had the satisfaction to succeed equal- 
ly well with recent burns, especially with the severe sores of 
the greater part of those who were wounded at the burning 
of the manufactory of Livry, near Paris. aie 
This important object tends more and more to produce 
new developements and learned explanations, in the course 
of instruction, which he (Dr. Lisfranc) gives at the amphi- 
theatre Broussais, near the Sorbonne.* In the instructions 
published by M. Labbarque, he announces that he is occu- 
pied upon an extended work, “upon the decomposition of 
animal substances and its influence upon animated beings.” 
All enlightened men wait with impatience for this work, in 
which i 
ao ee ee ey = >, particu v ‘ 
a ft is evident, that the use of the chlorates is 
the best 
that, either a lone 
¢ remedy against these maladies, and 
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