Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 31 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 61273 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 76 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 disease 9 time 9 case 7 illustration 6 form 6 body 6 blood 5 inflammation 5 cause 5 animal 4 symptom 4 man 4 great 4 good 4 food 4 chapter 4 Mr. 3 wound 3 water 3 treatment 3 tissue 3 surface 3 skin 3 patient 3 nervous 3 horse 3 head 3 fig 3 description 3 day 3 bone 3 States 2 work 2 woman 2 vessel 2 small 2 result 2 mind 2 little 2 large 2 heart 2 foot 2 follow 2 find 2 cow 2 condition 2 child 2 cattle 2 calf 2 breed Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 5007 disease 4822 case 4110 animal 3351 treatment 3179 time 3142 part 2644 blood 2522 symptom 2430 body 2327 foot 2240 day 2183 dog 2092 cause 2003 water 1971 condition 1731 horse 1634 tissue 1553 skin 1512 man 1491 pressure 1479 bone 1432 inflammation 1424 side 1380 description 1369 form 1307 result 1279 surface 1247 hand 1242 year 1239 way 1215 head 1176 place 1152 cattle 1140 heart 1139 wall 1123 life 1112 wound 1092 patient 1062 point 1061 portion 1047 pain 1023 eye 1022 membrane 993 change 981 lung 970 work 965 food 963 cow 955 organ 925 vessel Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 8775 _ 685 | 650 # 437 E. 381 Mr. 364 Fig 331 FIG 326 pus 277 Pinkham 256 M. 251 Lydia 231 . 227 Compound 209 Vegetable 205 Bella 192 Larry 190 Joe 189 Footnote 181 abdomen 178 os 174 Charke 173 New 173 Dr. 166 P. 165 Pl 159 Max 156 States 154 June 151 Treatment 145 A 144 forceps 140 Gilbert 139 God 138 pedis 138 de 130 Professor 129 © 127 F. 122 CHAPTER 112 tendon 112 Mrs. 110 la 110 England 108 vol 108 PLATE 106 United 106 D. 105 V. 104 b 101 S. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 16410 it 6876 he 4976 they 4170 i 3625 we 2376 them 2294 she 2272 you 2240 him 823 her 766 me 659 itself 598 us 530 himself 400 themselves 242 one 155 herself 113 ourselves 63 myself 51 yourself 20 hg 12 yours 11 oneself 9 theirs 9 mine 7 hers 7 ''s 4 his 2 you.= 2 ye 2 treatment._--they 2 ours 2 bone.--this 1 yourselves 1 yester-- 1 ya 1 walls.--this 1 vida= 1 tôt 1 treatment''.--nothing 1 thyself 1 thumps 1 thirst 1 thee 1 that,--they 1 sjelf 1 sat 1 regelmäà 1 opium.=--no 1 limbs.--this Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 76138 be 14462 have 3971 do 2935 make 2889 give 2595 become 2574 take 2564 find 1979 see 1805 follow 1754 say 1747 use 1699 know 1651 cause 1411 produce 1390 show 1365 go 1365 come 1319 occur 1160 pass 1140 appear 1131 form 1093 keep 1076 remove 948 get 937 bring 936 apply 911 increase 877 leave 874 call 838 seem 826 affect 810 contain 744 remain 737 continue 702 feel 689 carry 678 look 672 turn 658 think 646 describe 637 begin 616 hold 614 result 612 consist 610 prevent 606 cut 601 place 596 require 590 stand Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 8829 not 4310 more 3515 other 2973 so 2747 very 2360 well 2324 only 2293 most 2213 then 2168 great 2144 first 1954 such 1932 up 1902 much 1868 also 1829 large 1789 small 1738 often 1720 as 1712 usually 1685 same 1602 good 1591 many 1570 long 1494 even 1483 out 1483 little 1426 however 1364 less 1338 too 1224 now 1117 down 1059 sometimes 1036 few 1032 general 1005 always 953 certain 943 almost 934 low 905 especially 904 again 861 thus 856 never 851 soon 836 several 813 necessary 801 off 798 back 793 still 784 far Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 533 good 497 most 311 least 210 great 93 slight 81 large 72 Most 66 high 50 bad 46 early 42 small 37 low 35 simple 35 manif 29 strong 22 rinderp 21 fine 19 near 17 deep 16 safe 12 sure 10 wide 10 lowermost 10 long 10 late 9 weak 8 old 8 mild 7 common 6 wise 6 rich 6 easy 5 rare 5 poor 5 full 5 close 5 cheap 4 wild 4 thin 4 thick 4 short 4 quick 4 dear 4 cold 4 big 3 tiny 3 strange 3 pure 3 plain 3 nice Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1796 most 131 well 64 least 4 ¦ 2 hard 2 easiest 1 worst 1 tempest 1 soon 1 reã«stablished 1 near 1 lowermost 1 infest 1 highest 1 greatest 1 deepest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.net 1 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/5/9/4/25944/25944-h/25944-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/5/9/4/25944/25944-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/2/8/15283/15283-h/15283-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/5/2/8/15283/15283-h.zip 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=u3spAQAAIAAJ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 21 disease is not 16 animal is not 11 disease is usually 9 disease does not 9 disease is so 9 disease is very 8 _ is not 8 causes are obscure 8 disease is more 7 _ is _ 7 condition is not 7 disease is due 7 disease is most 7 disease is well 7 foot is now 7 horse does not 7 horse is not 7 pressure is not 7 treatment is simple 6 animal does not 6 animal is lame 6 body does not 6 disease is often 6 dog is not 6 foot is then 6 pressure is low 6 treatment is not 6 treatment is usually 5 _ do not 5 animal is dull 5 animal is unable 5 animals are more 5 animals are not 5 blood is dark 5 body is not 5 case is different 5 case is not 5 cases are not 5 cause is not 5 disease has not 5 disease is chronic 5 disease is liable 5 disease is readily 5 dog is more 5 feet are more 5 skin becomes dry 5 skin is usually 5 symptoms are much 5 symptoms are not 5 treatment is useless Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 disease is not uncommon 2 _ is not satisfactory 2 _ was not blind 2 animal is not too 2 dogs are not so 2 man is not so 2 symptoms are not always 2 treatment is not so 1 _ is no longer 1 _ is no more 1 _ is not commonly 1 _ is not especially 1 _ is not harmful 1 _ is not properly 1 _ is not so 1 _ show no sympathy 1 _ was no one 1 animal does not always 1 animal has no appetite 1 animal has no control 1 animal has no fever 1 animal is no longer 1 animal is not always 1 animal is not distressed 1 animal is not noticeably 1 animal is not so 1 animal is not susceptible 1 animal is not worth 1 animal shows no constitutional 1 animal shows no fever 1 animals are not alike 1 animals are not immune 1 animals are not often 1 animals are not subject 1 animals is not always 1 animals is not essential 1 animals is not so 1 blood is not extensive 1 blood is not sufficient 1 bodies are no recommendations 1 bodies are not only 1 body does not often 1 body has not already 1 body is not definitely 1 body is not equal 1 body is not quite 1 bone is not sufficient 1 bone was not at 1 bones is not unknown 1 case is not complicated A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 52548 author = Bloundelle-Burton, John title = The Seafarers date = keywords = Bampfyld; Bella; Bombay; Charke; Emperor; Fagg; Gilbert; God; Moon; Mr.; Mrs.; Pooley; Stephen; Waldron; man; ship summary = ''Come,'' said Stephen Charke, as the band of the Royal Marines struck Gilbert Bampfyld told Bella that he loved her and wanted her for his who were not sailors in the ship--as Bella, as well as Mrs. Pooley, ''Don''t know,'' Charke said, working his own glass a good deal. ''He knows some Hindustani,'' Bella replied; ''and, I think he said, some time.'' Whereon he strode forward, accompanied by Charke, while Mr. Fagg, who had come up from the saloon, began to keep such watch as was ''Great Heavens!'' exclaimed Gilbert, while Bella, scarcely knowing why, ''Well,'' said the chief mate, coming up to where Gilbert and Bella were ''I don''t like that man, Bella,'' Gilbert said when the other was out of ''He is a strange man,'' Bella said, ''and although I never loved him, I Charke said that the time had come for him to think of making his tour id = 14901 author = Briggs, Isaac George title = Epilepsy, Hysteria, and Neurasthenia: Their Causes, Symptoms, & Treatment date = keywords = attack; brain; cause; chapter; child; day; disease; epilepsy; food; good; man; mental; mind; nervous; neuropath; patient; sex; suggestion; time; victim; work summary = Psychic or Mental Epilepsy is a trance-state often occurring after attacks Dissociation, day-dreaming, and mental epilepsy are but In 430 cases of epilepsy in children, Osler found that 230 were attacked Injuries to the brain may cause epilepsy, and many cases date from birth, a Great fright may cause epilepsy, as in the case of a nervous girl whose Sunstroke may cause fits, and a few cases follow infectious diseases. being the cause, is only the result of a lack of self-control following excitement, fright, worry, mental work, alcoholism, sexual excess, nasal are the commonest exciting causes of neurasthenia; hard brain-work, unless little sleep and no real rest which mark life to-day are responsible for Suggestion treatment is of great use in curing nervous states and bad Suggestion will not cure epilepsy, hysteria or neurasthenia, but it No neuropath should have children, but marriage is good in mild cases, for id = 29632 author = Causey, James title = Competition date = keywords = Bishop; Max; armitage summary = "Amen," Max said. After supper, Armitage played chess with Bishop while I followed Max It took Max a few hours to home in on the test Max and Armitage donned spacesuits and went toward "Skeletons," Max said. "How?" Bishop said. "I wonder," Bishop said thoughtfully. "Rot!" Armitage said like drums beating. "That we''re working on it," Bishop said dryly. "That''s good," Armitage said seriously. Max said it reminded him of Scotland. "They''re harmless," Max said. "None?" Max asked Armitage dangerously. I came up quietly behind Armitage and Bishop saw what I "Thanks, dear," Max said thoughtfully, looking at the cards scattered on Bishop found Armitage this morning, in his cabin. "Oh, God," Max said. He said Armitage had died After dinner he suggested three-handed bridge and Max said he knew a All day long Bishop and Max have managed to give me the queen of spades. "Quite," Max said. "Right," Max said. "Symbiosis," Max said finally. id = 15283 author = Councilman, W. T. (William Thomas) title = Disease and Its Causes date = keywords = action; blood; body; cause; cell; condition; disease; fig; form; great; illustration; infection; organism; produce; relation; surface; tissue summary = SEPARATE ORGANISMS FROM A FLUID.--FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE PRODUCED BY AN ULTRA MICROSCOPIC ORGANISM.--OTHER DISEASES SO PRODUCED.--DO NEW DEFINITION OF DISEASE.--CHARACTERISTICS OF LIVING MATTER.--CELLS AS DEFINITION OF DISEASE.--CHARACTERISTICS OF LIVING MATTER.--CELLS AS blood cells constantly taking place, certain essential pigments, as cell formation is seen in certain tumors; although the body may add a the different organs are produced by growth of the cells of certain others that they were formed in the body as a result of the disease. the blood were living organisms and the cause of the disease, this did CLASSIFICATION OF THE ORGANISMS WHICH CAUSE DISEASE.--BACTERIA: SIZE, CLASSIFICATION OF THE ORGANISMS WHICH CAUSE DISEASE.--BACTERIA: SIZE, The living organisms which cause the infectious diseases are lymph or blood into internal organs where they produce disease. Bacteria cause disease by producing substances called toxines which OF HEART DISEASE BY INFECTION.--THE CONDITIONS PRODUCED IN THE OF HEART DISEASE BY INFECTION.--THE CONDITIONS PRODUCED IN THE id = 51398 author = De Vet, Charles V. title = Growing up on Big Muddy date = keywords = Kaiser; SMOKY summary = Kaiser stared at the tape in his hand for a long uncomprehending It had dropped Kaiser in the one remaining scout Kaiser had that one month to repair his scout or be stranded here The ship must have answered immediately, for the return message time Sam, Kaiser knew, was the ship''s mechanical diagnostician. The baby talk was worse on Kaiser''s next: last on the tape--the one Kaiser had read earlier. Kaiser walked away, following the long slow bend of the river, and and Kaiser occupied his time trying again to repair the damage to the During the next twenty-four hours, Kaiser and the mother ship exchanged Wrapping his equipment in a plastic tarp, Kaiser eased it out the When he reached the scout, Kaiser began to unload the sled. when Kaiser reached the river, he found that he had not returned to Before he had time to decide, Kaiser heard the small bell of the id = 30310 author = Dickson, Dr. (William) title = Special Report on Diseases of Cattle date = keywords = Bureau; Epsom; Europe; FIG; Industry; New; PLATE; States; Symptoms._--The; Texas; United; animal; blood; body; bone; calf; cattle; cause; cow; description; disease; form; head; illustration; inflammation; membrane; mouth; result; skin; symptom; time; treatment; tuberculosis; water; wound summary = When young animals are affected with the form of disease termed aphtha, treatment should be applied to the disease which causes the abnormal Sudden onset of the disease without visible cause, a number of animals _Treatment._--The affected animal should have nourishing feed containing a The treatment indicated in this case is the removal of the diseased _Causes._--Impoverished state of blood, the result of kidney diseases or of This definition might include diseases caused by certain animal parasites, extent of the disease, and the general condition of the animal affected. transmitted from the blood of diseased animals to that of healthy cattle, diseases affecting, description, symptoms, and treatment, 17-22 diseases of the skin, description and treatment, 332 Peritoneum, diseases affecting, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 45-47 diseases, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 44-45 diseases affecting, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 22-34 diseases affecting, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 22-34 diseases affecting, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 22-34 id = 51231 author = Dye, Charles title = Syndrome Johnny date = keywords = Alcala; Camba; Johnny; Syndrome summary = averaged description of Johnny too closely: A solid-looking man, "Phone for you, Doctor Alcala." The nurse was crisp but quiet, smiling Julio Camba, Federation Investigator, was a slender, dark man with Alcala thought carefully, for any man "Can''t such things be left to the guinea pigs?" Camba asked, watching Obviously Camba had done considerable investigating of Alcala before myth of Syndrome Plague Johnny started about a century ago." "Doctor Alcala"--the small man in the gray suit was tensely "Other men are that old," said Alcala. could know a man as well as he knew Johnny, firmly enough to believe "Come, Doctor Alcala," Camba said with a sneering merriment, "the "Lives will be saved in the long run," Alcala said obstinately. "I''m not good with words," said Alcala. "No." Alcala knew that he was shaking hands with a man who would be _Doctor Ricardo Alcala will die in the next plague, id = 63032 author = Garson, Bill title = One Against the Stars date = keywords = Arden; Bairn; Joe; Tom summary = Joe grinned--a big grin that made Bairn and Arden smile. "Come on, Joe," Arden said. "That''s what drives the ship, Joe," Arden said. "Come on, Joe," Arden said, heading for a ladder that was bolted to "That''s Whitey Burnet," Arden said, and started, for Joe had halted Arden turned to Joe who still stood by the side of the door, his This day, when Joe came in, Bairn looked at him with a strange twist "Tell me, Joe," Bairn said quietly. Arden said: "Do you know what we''re going to do to you, Joe?" "I know," said Joe. He heard Paul breathing in harsh gasps. "That tears it, Joe," Bairn said. "You won''t stop me, now, Arden," Joe said. As Joe came in the power room door, Black Tom asked: "How does it look? Black Tom said: "Thanks, Joe, for the can suggestion. "Please, John," Joe said, "I know where to get more water." He id = 19762 author = Hinkle, Thomas C. (Thomas Clark) title = How to Eat: A Cure for "Nerves" date = keywords = eat; food; man; nerve; nervous; people; thing summary = this, meant that if a man wished to eat for a great many days--that is, desired a long life--he must eat only a little each day. that most of these poor deluded nervous sufferers eat what they want quite true that nervous people crave the very things that hurt them nervous people have a way of sitting down to the table and eating until If nervous people would eat sparingly and RIGHT AND WRONG DIET FOR NERVOUS PEOPLE RIGHT AND WRONG DIET FOR NERVOUS PEOPLE nervous breakdown should not eat commercial sugar, eggs, or animal food suffering from a nervous breakdown, for sixty days quit eating candy and And now I wish to say some things about what nervous people should do Golf is also good exercise, but a large number of people who work for a A very sad thing about some nervous people is the fact that in their id = 23403 author = Huidekoper, Rush Shippen title = Special Report on Diseases of the Horse date = keywords = Glauber; PLATE; States; Symptoms._--The; animal; blood; body; bone; cause; condition; congestion; day; description; disease; feed; fever; follow; foot; form; great; heart; horse; illustration; inflammation; joint; leg; muscle; occur; organ; result; skin; small; surface; symptom; time; tissue; treatment; water; wound summary = Swellings of the skin usually come from wounds or other external causes The direct cause of inflammation is usually an irritant of some form. will cause disease, as an animal in this condition is liable to take description as to cause, prevention, and modes of treatment of diseases. Horses that are affected with chronic disease that causes a loud, work as general causes for diseases of the organs of respiration, such inflammation of surrounding diseased tissues, but in any case the result horses, since animals with this disease are very liable to have the of foot, description, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 418 Cranial bones, fractures, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 335 of heart, description, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 261 chronic inflammation, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 145 disease, description, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 435 lameness, description, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 365 cord, inflammation of membranes, causes, symptoms, treatment, etc., 232 diseases, or phlebitis, causes, symptoms, and treatment, 268 id = 19261 author = Jackson, Chevalier title = Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery date = keywords = Bronchoscopic; Clinic; ESOPHAGUS; Fig; Vol; author; body; case; chapter; child; direct; esophageal; esophagoscope; forceps; foreign; laryngeal; larynx; patient; stenosis; trachea; tube summary = foreign body work, the esophageal speculum shown at A and B, in Fig. 4, is of the greatest service. foreign-body work in the larynx, and for the removal of benign _Upper-lobe-bronchus Forceps_.--Foreign bodies rarely lodge in an Posterior forceps-spaces are often scanty in cases of foreign bodies for removing large, smooth foreign bodies from the esophagus.] distal tube-mouth to a foreign body or a growth while forceps are In recent cases fixed foreign bodies cause little cough; in their removal by bronchoscopy, the cases of prolonged foreign body hiding a foreign body should be removed with the aspirating tube (Fig. 9) rather than by swabbing or sponge-pumping, when the bronchoscopic The limitations of bronchoscopic removal of foreign bodies are usually it is no longer a case of foreign body in the esophagus. the author; and he has removed foreign bodies from patients over 80 Foreign Bodies in the Larynx, Trachea, Bronchi and Esophagus id = 14980 author = Jackson, Josephine A. (Josephine Agnes) title = Outwitting Our Nerves: A Primer of Psychotherapy date = keywords = Dr.; Footnote; Freud; Nature; body; cause; chapter; emotion; fear; find; idea; instinct; kind; life; like; little; man; mind; nervous; person; self; time; way; woman; work summary = cause is organic, only physical means can cure it, but if the trouble False or nervous neuritis may feel like real neuritis (the result of =The Man behind the Body.= The trouble is real; the organs do "act ways of man as a whole--mind as well as body. that the experiences of life tend to bring ideas and emotions together instincts, the laws of habit, and association of ideas and suggestion, developing physical and emotional life for an end that does not come; needy little ones; the man or woman whose sex-instinct is too strong the life-force, we feel like echoing Paul''s words: "He who began a genius is the man whose conscious and subconscious minds work together when we remember that powerful emotions like fear and anger tend to nervous person--that our subconscious minds with their repressed about repressed instincts or the real reasons for fearful emotions and id = 26365 author = Jamison, Alcinous B. (Alcinous Burton) title = Intestinal Ills Chronic Constipation, Indigestion, Autogenetic Poisons, Diarrhea, Piles, Etc. Also Auto-Infection, Auto-Intoxication, Anemia, Emaciation, Etc. Due to Proctitis and Colitis date = keywords = Boiled; CHAPTER; body; bowel; canal; case; chronic; constipation; disease; fece; food; inflammation; intestinal; rectum; symptom; time; tissue; water summary = chronic constipation caused by injury or inflammation of the lower Are a sour stomach and foul intestinal canal fit receptacles for food sufferer to seek medical aid for disease of the stomach, bowels, liver, escaped chronic inflammation of the lower bowels, an ailment common and important symptom of chronic inflammation of the lower bowel, and the For the cause and cure of that mere symptom of a disease, constipation, Chronic inflammation of the lower bowel causes, as I have pointed out, diseased rectum every day, but not without increasing the inflammation Catarrhal inflammation of the mucous membrane of the anal canal will case of a person having a foul intestinal canal, a condition cause of all the symptoms of rectal disease is chronic inflammation requirements for the cure of a chronic disease of the anus and rectum water to the skin or to the mucous membrane two or three times a day. id = 22771 author = Jennings, Robert title = Cattle and Their Diseases Embracing Their History and Breeds, Crossing and Breeding, and Feeding and Management; with the Diseases to Which They Are Subject, and the Remedies Best Adapted to Their Cure date = keywords = Ayrshire; England; France; June; LIFE; Mr.; New; North; Scotland; States; animal; breed; calf; case; cattle; cow; disease; food; form; good; great; illustration; large; milk; time; year summary = that _an Ayrshire cow generally gives a larger return of milk for the Jersey, is based on the general appearance of the cow when in milk--no Dutch bulls were generally long horned, large boned, coarse animals, a the case of cows giving milk, at the times when the udder is more milking qualities of his cows, especially for the quantity they give, Cows in milk require more food in proportion to their size and weight If given at milking-time, the cows will generally give down their grass to a poor quality of hay or straw, for cows in milk, should not be In winter, the best food for cows in milk will be good sweet meadow hay, produce the largest flow of milk, the treatment is as follows: The cows milk from the cow, which it should have three or four times a day, The use of the milk and flesh of diseased cattle has id = 14776 author = Kincaid, P. R. title = The Arabian Art of Taming and Training Wild & Vicious Horses date = keywords = colt; hand; head; horse; pull; stable; time summary = gentle horse into the stable first and hitch him, then quietly walk around the same manner, and in a short time the horse will let you lift them and a very light, soft hand, merely touching the horse, all ways rubbing the attach a second strap to the colt''s halter, and lead your horse up You should lead the broke horse into the stable first, and get the colt, halter close to his head with your left hand, at the same time reaching your right hand, until the horse feels your whole weight on the saddle; horses can be started true and steady in a few minutes time; they are all stand on the right side of the horse, and hold him by the bit, while you Let one man lead the horse to keep him gentle, horse more than half an hour at a time. id = 47234 author = Lee, Henry, M.D. title = On the origin of inflammation of the veins and of the causes, consequences, and treatment of purulent deposits date = keywords = EXPERIMENT; Hunter; Post; blood; case; inflammation; vein; vessel summary = When pus is mixed with blood, fresh-drawn from a healthy animal, it of blood and pus coagulated before it could traverse the jugular vein, whole of the blood contained in the vessel forming a solid coagulum. conclude, that it was the coagulation of the blood in the large veins which constitutional symptoms follow inflammation of the veins, will [21] In cases where pus has been found in veins surrounded by coagula, with the blood, nor will inflammation of the vein through which the shreds of lymph and small quantities of pus and blood, continued to appearance of disease in any of the other veins of the limb, nor in ass; the vein immediately became "corded", and the blood appeared to In one case, the blood is generally found of a dark colour, appearances, observed in cases of secondary inflammations: the first D. CASES IN WHICH VITIATED FLUIDS WERE OBSERVED IN THE VEINS OF THE id = 51782 author = Leinster, Murray title = Doctor date = keywords = Altaira; Nordenfeld; Queen; Star summary = Queen_ floated, while lift-ships brought passengers and cargo up to One by one the lift-ships hooked onto the airlock of the _Star Queen_ the _Star Queen_ on Altaira, and the destruction of her space drive, doctor could look through into the small lift-ship from the planet down She walked precisely from the lift-ship into the _Star Queen''s_ Then the air officer stopped Nordenfeld as he was about to join Jensen jungle plants the _Star Queen_ carried through space. The doctor left the air room and passed the place where the little girl--the last passenger to board the _Star Queen_--waited patiently And Nordenfeld, the ship''s doctor of the _Star Queen_, went into the Her father carried her to a little ship, said Kathy, and they talked Jensen said, "But you can''t do that, Nordenfeld! that Altaira sent the chlorophage on board the _Star Queen_ in the hope "We''re not landing," said Doctor Nordenfeld. id = 29273 author = Luce, Nancy title = A Complete Edition of the Works of Nancy Luce date = keywords = God; Lord; poor summary = God''s Words--Sickness--Poor Little Hearts--Milk--No The greatest sin is to cruel the poor harmless dumb creatures, O Lord, my God of heaven, I pray for Thy holy spirit to go in all the and kind to all the poor harmless dumb creatures, and sick human too, Hear my prayer, O Lord, my God of Heaven, and let my cry come unto Thee, Died in distress, Poor little heart, with hens, because milk is so good for human. good deal, till she gets well; I have cured a number of hens with this Be kind to poor hens in every way, and not let them suffer take good care of your poor hens or they cannot lay you eggs. all my days, and their poor hens cannot lay much and they die off. Poor dear little heart, to dear little hens, and other dumb creatures. everlasting wo, if any one is cruel to dear little hens, and other dumb id = 50774 author = MacLean, Katherine title = Contagion date = keywords = Barton; June; Max; Mead; Minos; Pat summary = June," came Max''s voice quietly into her earphones. is Max Stark, M.D. This is June Walton, M.D., Hal Barton, M.D., and "Do you think all the Meads look like that?" he said to June on "It was a yacht," Max said, still looking up, "second hand, an old-time "You''re just a specimen animal to me, bud!" Max grinned at Pat Mead, see his startled face looking through the glass at Pat. Hal Barton switched to a narrow radio beam, explained rapidly and through to us," Hal Barton told Pat, who was sitting up watching Max June and Max got up firmly, edged through the crowd, captured Pat and "I''m not Pat, I''m Max," said the tall man with the blue eyes and the June and Max told them to wait and returned to the tank room. They were looking at Max. June stepped silently out of the tank room, id = 21907 author = Makellar, Archibald title = An Investigation into the Nature of Black Phthisis or Ulceration Induced by Carbonaceous Accumulation in the Lungs of Coal Miners date = keywords = Pencaitland; black; carbon; case; coal; disease; lung; matter summary = carbon in some cases is expectorated in considerable quantity for some the report of a case of peculiar black infiltration of the whole lungs, were entirely coal-miners; eight expectorated carbonaceous matter, and This case comes under the third division of the disease, where the lungs early period, by bad air generated in the coal-pit at Black Wells, from small cysts throughout this lobe, containing carbon in a fluid state. the bronchial glands contained black matter, similar in appearance to substance of the lungs and bronchial glands containing black matter; and age, some of the bronchial glands contained no tinging black matter at The carbonaceous matter of this lung, appears rather black matter makes its appearance in the outer surface of the lungs, and hundred, the lungs are generally infiltrated with fluid black matter, black matter in the lungs; for instance, long-continued living in a id = 32748 author = Marks, Winston K. (Winston Kinney) title = Mate in Two Moves date = keywords = Christmas; Dr.; Murt; Phyllis; Sutton; Sylvester; look summary = Love came somewhat late to Dr. Sylvester Murt. High Dawn Hospital, where 38-year-old Dr. Murt was resident pathologist, Murt''s assistant, Dr. Phyllis Sutton, spotted the first irregularity in in Murt''s private office-lab, after completing reports on two rush Murt sipped his coffee and said, "Be thankful you aren''t a psychiatrist. "Good _night_!" Murt closed the door behind him quickly and became aware His eyes had a thin glaze over them, he breathed shallowly and, if Dr. Murt had not known the little man''s cynically promiscuous nature so Murt found Phyllis Sutton at the microtome, finishing a wax section, and Murt wiped off the lipstick and looked at Phyllis, expecting to find at shouldn''t have had, and they dubbed the Love Bug, _Murt''s Virus_. "What do you mean?" Murt asked, raising his head. authority on Murt''s virus, he had had little time to think subjectively I don''t have Murt''s Virus." She slipped an arm around id = 29612 author = Pinkham, Lydia Estes title = Treatise on the Diseases of Women date = keywords = Compound; Compuesto; Lydia; Lynn; MRS; Massachusetts; Pinkham; Sanative; Vegetable; Vegetal; blood; cure; good; menstruation; pain; time; woman summary = Mrs. Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound should be taken at once, because of this Vegetable Compound in moderate doses four times a day for weeks, or Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound through this trying time, Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound for a short time, I believe rénales sont guéries par l''emploi de Lydia Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound, Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound in Verbindung mit Lydia E. I am very grateful for the good Lydia Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound did who understands the peculiar troubles of her sex; that woman is Mrs. Pinkham, who with that famous medicine, =Lydia E. Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound that it is the safest and best medicine for Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound cured me within four months Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound has done me a great deal of good. E. Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound she is now in the best of health. Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound is Especially Successful in Curing Pinkham''s Vegetable Compound, The Great Woman''s Remedy for id = 11204 author = Reeks, H. Caulton (Harry Caulton) title = Diseases of the Horse''s Foot date = keywords = FIG; Footnote; Gutenacker; Journal; Mr.; Record; Smith; Treatment; Veterinary; Wall; animal; bone; case; disease; foot; form; heel; horn; illustration; lateral; operation; portion; shoe; surface; wound summary = The Foot showing Grooves made in the Wall for Treatment of Laminitis Foot showing the Grooves made in Smith''s Operation for Side-bones Foot showing the Grooves made in Smith''s Operation for Side-bones In this case the natural growth of the horn carries the heel of the shoe horn in cases where a portion, or the whole, of the wall has been removed antiseptic, is a useful dressing in a case of a punctured foot, or a case of sand-crack, removes the bearing from that portion of the wall. two cases of contracted foot treated by these means in which the heels shape of removal of the horn of the sole or the frog, as the case may be. coronary portion of the heel of the fore-foot by the shoe of the hind. removal of a large portion of the wall may for some time throw the animal Operations on the horn, treatment of contracted foot by id = 61805 author = Reynolds, John Murray title = Goddess of the Moon date = keywords = Colton; Diana; Earth; Gral; Larry; Maid; Moon; Ripon; Sky; Thala summary = "So you''re the crazy man who is talking of going to the Moon," Larry looked up with a broad grin as Larry came into the dusty control room. For a long moment Larry stared at Ripon. When Larry Gibson returned to the ancient and seedy-looking _Sky Maid_ cross the Atlantic!" Ripon laughed, and dropped a hand on Larry''s "Gentlemen," said Ripon, solemnly shaking hands with both Larry and arm, and Larry saw something that a group of the insect-men were very "One of those old ships must have reached the Moon after all!" Larry When Larry had freed the girl''s hands, she turned to the five Earth-men "If you came into the hands of the Lords of Gral-Thala," she said man pushed his way through to Ripon and Larry. Just before they left, Xylon came up to shake hands with Larry. guards Larry saw Ripon, and some of the men from the _Sky Maid_, and id = 38676 author = Rogers, Margaret Cobb title = Adenoids and Diseased Tonsils: Their Effect on General Intelligence date = keywords = Group; I.Q.; gain; table; test summary = No. of cases Normal Average Defective and Tonsils Adenoids Deaf Table showing how time of improvement of "operated cases" compares with the test case lost ·3 of a pound, while the control gained ·9. The average gain of test group over control Other children in the test group who made large gains, were case 12, net gain of the test group during a second six months'' period. After twelve months, the test group shows one gain of 19 after twelve months, all but 2 of the test cases showed a gain, and all gain of the test group during the second six months of the experiment, Of the test group 8 cases in the second period either gained of the test group cases made more than half of their gain in the second The average gain of the test group was 3·09 points after 12 months, id = 25944 author = Stelwagon, Henry Weightman title = Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine date = keywords = Dermatitis; Gynecology; M.D.; Medical; Obstetrics; Professor; Synonyms; University; application; case; describe; disease; eruption; fig; illustration; lesion; ointment; skin; state; symptom; treatment summary = The disease is usually persistent and often rebellious to treatment; in The result of treatment is usually favorable, although the disease is A rare disease characterized in the beginning by one or more usually those cases of cutaneous disturbance, usually acute in character, which This is a rare, usually hereditary, disease or condition, characterized The eruption makes its appearance, as a rule, somewhat rapidly, usually Psoriasis is a more inflammatory disease, is seen usually more Acne is an inflammatory, usually chronic, disease of the sebaceous In what appears to be a variety of this disease, known usually The lesions begin as small, usually pea-sized, pustules; increase forming usually large palm-sized patches, and, as a rule, limited to the The disease is rare, and consists usually of one or several The eruption may be general, as usually the case in the earlier appearing usually in the first year of the disease. id = 37675 author = Warfield, Louis M. (Louis Marshall) title = Arteriosclerosis and Hypertension, with Chapters on Blood Pressure 3rd Edition. date = keywords = arteriosclerosis; artery; blood; case; change; chapter; disease; fig; find; heart; illustration; increase; normal; patient; pressure; pulse; vessel summary = marked rise of blood pressure and slowing of the heart beat. increases the blood pressure and, strangely enough, the arteries respond Cases are seen, however, in which blood pressure increases as the seen in those cases characterized by high blood pressure. artery and to measure the blood pressure accurately. blood pressure reading represents the work of the heart at the _moment [Illustration: Fig. 24.--Method of taking blood pressure with patient [Illustration: Fig. 24.--Method of taking blood pressure with patient aorta and large arteries near the heart contract upon the blood and keep movement of blood is therefore greater in high pulse pressure cases than No rules can be laid down for blood pressure in valvular heart disease. arterial blood pressure without discoverable cause. have been cases of arteriosclerosis with low blood pressure, accompanied arteries, even though the blood pressure be normal, should be considered id = 9478 author = Youatt, William title = The Dog date = keywords = Blaine; Duke; England; Europe; Mr.; Newfoundland; Professor; Society; Zoological; animal; breed; case; considerable; course; day; description; disease; dog; ear; english; eye; follow; footnote; form; good; great; greyhound; head; horse; hound; inflammation; large; little; long; place; rabie; small; symbol; time summary = that any long time would pass before the dog--who now, in every country As an animal of draught the dog is highly useful in some countries. between the two animals; the eye of the dog of every country and species the dog, and the good qualities of this animal, in an interesting point of the old Egyptian temples, the dog appears, with his long ears and frequently pursued by hounds and greyhounds; but when the dogs came up No long time probably passes ere the dog commits some little fault. into one of them, the dog proves a most useful animal; for he runs too, who are fondest of dogs, the animal looks far better in his natural The dog appears to suffer a great deal of pain in the ear in common The following is a singular case of this disease:--1st July, 1820 a dog smaller animals generally, and particularly with dogs.