Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The dispensary should be the next door on the right.
I'll have to go to the dispensary in the morning.
Getting inside the dispensaries, many patients say, is not difficult.
"And all of these have probably been quite often in the Dispensary?"
Then he went into the dispensary and closed the door.
The next day she had gone to the school dispensary and that test was positive also.
After a few years, he established a free dispensary with the help from his community.
Until 1850 he was assistant at the children's dispensary of the university.
"She said they'd get the dispensary to give me something for it."
He walked down the hall and went to the dispensary.
He set up practice there and also opened a dispensary for the poor.
We'll take him to the dispensary to be cleaned up.
Its members went on to found several dispensaries and institutions throughout the world.
State dispensaries no longer had even the most common antibiotics.
I would rather like to see that dispensary of hers.
All she now needed was a few moments access to the dispensary.
And a small health dispensary was set up near the mission farm.
There was a woman at the counter and a back room which must be the dispensary.
He went to the dispensary and stretched himself out on the bed.
A school and a dispensary were started for the poor of the parish.
There are more than 40,000 optical dispensaries in the country.
The next morning, during sick call, he presented himself to the dispensary.
There may be a doctor or small dispensary in these towns.
I spent the latter part of the afternoon in my dispensary.
The college has its own dispensary which provides all medical facilities to the students.
First published in 1833, the Dispensatory was authored and edited for more than a hundred years by successive generations of faculty at the college.
King's American Dispensatory (1898) says of the extract:
'The New Dispensatory,' editions of 1786, 1789, 1791.
Or, the New London Dispensatory, (6 vols.
The New Dispensatory, London, 1753, 8vo, Edinburgh, 1781, 1791.
More typical is the warning given regarding side effects of santonin in King's American Dispensatory:
According to King's American Dispensatory (1898), glycerite is:
Duncan in 1803 brought out the Edinburgh New Dispensatory, an improved version of William Lewis's work.
King's American Dispensatory (18th edition).
According to the 1869 Cook's Physiomedical Dispensatory:
According to the US Dispensatory (1918), the leaves, stem, and root are said to possess medicinal properties, but the seeds are most efficacious.
This, upon the authority of Pereira and the Dispensatory, I swallowed without a tremor as to the danger of the result.
King's American Dispensatory: Althaea officinalis (Marshmallow)
U. S. Dispensatory, 1918 (Henriette's Herbal Homepage)
A copy of the London Dispensatory, edited by Nicholas Culpeper and published in the year 1650 included the following formula for this substance:
Rubia.-Madder, King's American Dispensatory, 1898.
The National Dispensatory, with Alfred M. Stillé (4 eds., 1879-'86).
The work was published in 1746 as Translation and Improvement of the London Dispensatory, and he received from the college a gift of the copyright and a hundred guineas above the expenses incurred.
According to the 1918 United States Dispensatory, the plant has a long history of use in India as a medicine and in the preparation of a starch known as Giloe-ka-sat or as Palo.
He opposed the physicians' claims to a monopoly of practice and subverted it by publishing an English version of their Pharmacoepia in 1649 under the title A Physical Directory or Translation of the London Dispensatory.
In physician William Cook's 1869 work The Physiomedical Dispensatory is recorded a chapter on the uses and preparations of bloodroot, which described tinctures and extractions, and also included at least the following cautionary report:
Eclectic Materia Medica is a materia medica written by the eclectic medicine doctor Harvey Wickes Felter (co-author with John Uri Lloyd of King's American Dispensatory).
King's American Dispensatory is a book first published in 1854 that covers the uses of herbs used in American medical practice, especially by those involved in Eclectic medicine which was the botanical school of medicine in the 19th to 20th centuries.
His 'English Dispensatory' (1721), of which a fourth edition appeared in 1722 and a twelfth in 1749, contains a complete account of the materia medica and of therapeutics, and many of the prescriptions contained in it were popular.
There stood the Dispensatory, with the air of a business-like office, wherein all the specifics of the materia medica had been brought together for a scientific conversazione, but, becoming enamored of each other's society, had resolved to stay, overcrowded though they might be, and make an indefinite sitting of it.
Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
First published in 1833, the Dispensatory was authored and edited for more than a hundred years by successive generations of faculty at the college.
King's American Dispensatory (1898) says of the extract:
'The New Dispensatory,' editions of 1786, 1789, 1791.
Or, the New London Dispensatory, (6 vols.
The New Dispensatory, London, 1753, 8vo, Edinburgh, 1781, 1791.
More typical is the warning given regarding side effects of santonin in King's American Dispensatory:
According to King's American Dispensatory (1898), glycerite is:
Duncan in 1803 brought out the Edinburgh New Dispensatory, an improved version of William Lewis's work.
King's American Dispensatory (18th edition).
According to the 1869 Cook's Physiomedical Dispensatory:
According to the US Dispensatory (1918), the leaves, stem, and root are said to possess medicinal properties, but the seeds are most efficacious.
This, upon the authority of Pereira and the Dispensatory, I swallowed without a tremor as to the danger of the result.
King's American Dispensatory: Althaea officinalis (Marshmallow)
U. S. Dispensatory, 1918 (Henriette's Herbal Homepage)
A copy of the London Dispensatory, edited by Nicholas Culpeper and published in the year 1650 included the following formula for this substance:
Rubia.-Madder, King's American Dispensatory, 1898.
The National Dispensatory, with Alfred M. Stillé (4 eds., 1879-'86).
The work was published in 1746 as Translation and Improvement of the London Dispensatory, and he received from the college a gift of the copyright and a hundred guineas above the expenses incurred.
According to the 1918 United States Dispensatory, the plant has a long history of use in India as a medicine and in the preparation of a starch known as Giloe-ka-sat or as Palo.
He opposed the physicians' claims to a monopoly of practice and subverted it by publishing an English version of their Pharmacoepia in 1649 under the title A Physical Directory or Translation of the London Dispensatory.
In physician William Cook's 1869 work The Physiomedical Dispensatory is recorded a chapter on the uses and preparations of bloodroot, which described tinctures and extractions, and also included at least the following cautionary report:
Eclectic Materia Medica is a materia medica written by the eclectic medicine doctor Harvey Wickes Felter (co-author with John Uri Lloyd of King's American Dispensatory).
King's American Dispensatory is a book first published in 1854 that covers the uses of herbs used in American medical practice, especially by those involved in Eclectic medicine which was the botanical school of medicine in the 19th to 20th centuries.
His 'English Dispensatory' (1721), of which a fourth edition appeared in 1722 and a twelfth in 1749, contains a complete account of the materia medica and of therapeutics, and many of the prescriptions contained in it were popular.
There stood the Dispensatory, with the air of a business-like office, wherein all the specifics of the materia medica had been brought together for a scientific conversazione, but, becoming enamored of each other's society, had resolved to stay, overcrowded though they might be, and make an indefinite sitting of it.
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