The Canada Journal of Dental Science, Volume 2

Voorkant
1869
 

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Pagina 285 - Truth, crushed to earth, shall rise again; The eternal years of God are hers; But Error, wounded, writhes in pain, And dies among his worshippers.
Pagina 224 - Every man should have this liberty and no more, to do unto others as he would that they should do unto him; upon that common foundation rest liberty, equality, and morality.
Pagina 122 - A Treatise on the Diseases and Surgery of the Mouth, Jaws, and Associate Parts. By JAMES E. GARRETSON, MD, DDS, etc. Illustrated with Steel Plates and numerous Wood-cuts. 8vo. Extra cloth. $7.50. " There is no work of the kind which bears comparison with it.
Pagina 242 - Society then proceeded to the election of officers for the ensuing year, which resulted as follows : President, Dr.
Pagina 155 - And the ball being one of those named from its shape, And some fancied resemblance it bears to the grape, St. Foix went down, With a groan and a frown, And a hole in his small-clothes the size of a crown,— — Stagger'da bit By this ' palpable hit,' He turn'd on his face, and went off in a fit.
Pagina 145 - Hence the hypothesis that living beings resulted from special creations, being a primitive hypothesis, is probably an untrue hypothesis. If the interpretations of Nature given by aboriginal men, were erroneous in other directions, they were most likely erroneous in this direction.
Pagina 146 - Nature considered rationally, that is to say, submitted to the process of thought, is a unity in diversity of phenomena ; a harmony, blending together all created things, however dissimilar in form and attributes; one great whole animated by the breath of life.
Pagina 189 - Good old plan, That he should take who has the power, And he should keep who can,'
Pagina 281 - There is practical wisdom in the old adage that 'an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure.
Pagina 144 - Early ideas are not usually true ideas. Undeveloped intellect, be it that of an individual or that of the race, forms conclusions which require to be revised and re-revised before they reach a tolerable correspondence with realities. Were it otherwise, there would be no discovery, no increase of intelligence. What we call the progress of knowledge, is the bringing of Thoughts into harmony with Things ; and it implies that the first Thoughts are either wholly out of harmony with Things, or in very...

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