PECULIARITIES IN THE MANUFACTURE OF 
JENSEN'S CRYSTAL PEPSIN: 
NATURE OF THE 
IMITATIONS, ETC. 
HE champion pepsin of the world! The 
only yem re worthy to be imitated! 
Even the we = uring chemists 
could not resist em temptatio 
One party used glue as a ene adulter- 
ant for the production of scale pepsin; another 
now succeeded in flooding the market 
with their imitations of = scale pepsin, owing 
to its extreme chea This party now de- 
clares (not to the kaa) that they use sixty 
great injury these imitations cause my 
preparations can easily be understood. 
The protection chiefly relied upon is through 
between the genuine and the spurious article. 
When prescribing my me 
now underline my name t 
most physicians 
hus, JENSEN'S Crystal 
= Pepsin, and no misconception can excuse sub- 
The great reputation of this pepsin 
es m that it is a pepsin, z.e., the 
texture of the stom 
~ om is entirely dissolved, thereby ES 
all the pepsi WwW ereto is m 
_. Tecent improvement in precipitating as this 
_ Solution all of the earth saline matter, 
_ leaving only the azotized constituent, containin ng 
all of the peptic aes and, finally, is further 
upon glass plates antil 
EE Medica produced for the market in 
Hi is also perfectly alee upon the tongue, 
t to the taste, and practically in odorous. 
h it Keren a higher price than 
the profession’s vigilance in discriminating | 
ne 
+ tra 
achs in which the ferment is 
M. S.— 
k throat-mop.—from the Medical Bulletin. 
y 
of the pepsin in each teas 
upon albuminoids, have inspired physicians of 
the bladder e suc ese novel 
uses has already become generally known to 
the profession all over the wor Physicians 
writing for samples will receive prompt returns 
Dr. Hollman (Nederl. Weekbl., 18, p. 272) 
reports the case of an old man, aged 8o years, 
suffering from retention of urine, in whom the 
contained coagulated albuminoid masses mixed 
with blood. A few hours after the injection of 
about 16 grains of Dr. Jensen’s Pepsin dissolved 
n water, a large amount of a dark, viscid, fetid 
fai id AEF PRX by the catheter.— Londi 
Medical 
Dr. Edwin Rosenthal, acting on the su 
tion of Dr. Wolf, has used an died 
concentrated solution of pepsin as an applica- 
tion to the membranes of diphtheritic patients, 
for which there seemed to be no other help than 
re 
ing the membranes, admitting a 
free aération of the Pee and placing them 
soon on the road to conya 
tion he used was: 
R rs s Pepsin, Zj; 
aen +G P, ptt ir: 
hos q- 5 
—Apply copiously every hour with a 
Formula for Wine of Pepsin: 
ic., gr. v. 
Sig.—f3j after meals. This is three grains 
poonful, 
For meas nia of lie it has afforded 
te pein 
bed. <u purity and solu- 
Salta eth ts great ~~ 
; ARL L = ENSI SEN, 
ve short interval: when other remedies ee S 
failed. 
